Year Without A Summer by Willie Soon and Stephen H. Yaskell | Climate Realists
The year 1816 is still known to scientists and historians as “eighteen hundred and froze to death” or the “year without a summer.” It was the locus of a period of natural ecological destruction not soon to be forgotten. During that year, the Northern Hemisphere was slammed with the effects of at least two abnormal but natural phenomena. These events were mysterious at the time, and even today they are not well understood.Hmm--this seems odd, since the world is allegedly so very hot right now:
First, 1816 marked the midpoint of one of the Sun’s extended periods of low magnetic activity, called the Dalton Minimum.
[From today's St Paul Pioneer Press, page 12C:] Twelve of this month's high temperature records for the Twin Cities were set during the 1930s, four of them in 1931 and four of them in 1933.
1 comment:
While otherwise correct, the first graph in the text includes both the "Mounder" and "Dolton" Minima. Some sort of Freudian or Boolean slip there. ;) And of course I am not saying that undercuts the basis thesis!! I am a terruble spelur miself.
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