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Old March 18th 10, 09:13 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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http://nsidc.org/data/seaice_index/i...timeseries.png

That wasn't in the script. Arctic Ice really on the up despite record
global high satellite temperatures. Nothing is what it seems apparently



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Old March 18th 10, 09:40 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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On Mar 18, 9:13*pm, "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote:
http://nsidc.org/data/seaice_index/i...timeseries.png

That wasn't in the script. *Arctic Ice really on the up despite record
global high satellite temperatures. Nothing is what it seems apparently


It's a snapshot Lawrence..........it's due to synoptics and it has
nothing to do with any script, or any trend. You just don't learn.

The last snapshot you posted, exactly 10 days ago was the day of the
probable 2010 maximum and it has decreased, albeit slowly and
erratically, since then. You did say that Arctic Ice was heading
towards the mean. It wasn't, it isn't and the likelihood of it
reaching the mean at any time this melt season is as remote as the
MetO giving you a sinecure (look it up). The present state of Arctic
sea ice is completely typical of this time of year at the end of the
freezing season. Well below the 30-year mean - as it will be at the
end of the melt season. The only question is how low will the 2010
minimum be. So there. *))

http://www.ijis.iarc.uaf.edu/en/home/seaice_extent.htm





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Old March 18th 10, 09:56 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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"Dawlish" wrote in message
...
On Mar 18, 9:13 pm, "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote:
http://nsidc.org/data/seaice_index/i...timeseries.png

That wasn't in the script. Arctic Ice really on the up despite record
global high satellite temperatures. Nothing is what it seems apparently


It's a snapshot Lawrence..........it's due to synoptics and it has
nothing to do with any script, or any trend. You just don't learn.

The last snapshot you posted, exactly 10 days ago was the day of the
probable 2010 maximum and it has decreased, albeit slowly and
erratically, since then. You did say that Arctic Ice was heading
towards the mean. It wasn't, it isn't and the likelihood of it
reaching the mean at any time this melt season is as remote as the
MetO giving you a sinecure (look it up). The present state of Arctic
sea ice is completely typical of this time of year at the end of the
freezing season. Well below the 30-year mean - as it will be at the
end of the melt season. The only question is how low will the 2010
minimum be. So there. *))

http://www.ijis.iarc.uaf.edu/en/home/seaice_extent.htm



So when you pontificated on low ice levels that wasn't a snapshot.

You are one hypocritical son of a bitch and thats fightin' talk in Dodge
Sydenham


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Old March 18th 10, 10:12 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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On 18 Mar, 21:56, "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote:
"Dawlish" wrote in message

...
On Mar 18, 9:13 pm, "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote:

http://nsidc.org/data/seaice_index/i...timeseries.png


That wasn't in the script. Arctic Ice really on the up despite record
global high satellite temperatures. Nothing is what it seems apparently


It's a snapshot Lawrence..........it's due to synoptics and it has
nothing to do with any script, or any trend. You just don't learn.

The last snapshot you posted, exactly 10 days ago was the day of the
probable 2010 maximum and it has decreased, albeit slowly and
erratically, since then. You did say that Arctic Ice was heading
towards the mean. It wasn't, it isn't and the likelihood of it
reaching the mean at any time this melt season is as remote as the
MetO giving you a sinecure (look it up). The present state of Arctic
sea ice is completely typical of this time of year at the end of the
freezing season. Well below the 30-year mean - as it will be at the
end of the melt season. The only question is how low will the 2010
minimum be. So there. *))

http://www.ijis.iarc.uaf.edu/en/home/seaice_extent.htm

So when you pontificated on low ice levels that wasn't a snapshot.

You are one hypocritical son of a bitch and thats fightin' talk in Dodge
Sydenham


Why do I waste my life reading these threads I never seem to learn.
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Old March 18th 10, 10:40 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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"Simon S" wrote in message
...
On 18 Mar, 21:56, "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote:
"Dawlish" wrote in message

...
On Mar 18, 9:13 pm, "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote:

http://nsidc.org/data/seaice_index/i...timeseries.png


That wasn't in the script. Arctic Ice really on the up despite record
global high satellite temperatures. Nothing is what it seems apparently


It's a snapshot Lawrence..........it's due to synoptics and it has
nothing to do with any script, or any trend. You just don't learn.

The last snapshot you posted, exactly 10 days ago was the day of the
probable 2010 maximum and it has decreased, albeit slowly and
erratically, since then. You did say that Arctic Ice was heading
towards the mean. It wasn't, it isn't and the likelihood of it
reaching the mean at any time this melt season is as remote as the
MetO giving you a sinecure (look it up). The present state of Arctic
sea ice is completely typical of this time of year at the end of the
freezing season. Well below the 30-year mean - as it will be at the
end of the melt season. The only question is how low will the 2010
minimum be. So there. *))

http://www.ijis.iarc.uaf.edu/en/home/seaice_extent.htm

So when you pontificated on low ice levels that wasn't a snapshot.

You are one hypocritical son of a bitch and thats fightin' talk in Dodge
Sydenham


Why do I waste my life reading these threads I never seem to learn.


Why do I bother replying to people who regretted reading my thread-I never
seem to learn




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Old March 18th 10, 10:48 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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"Dawlish" wrote in message
...
On Mar 18, 9:13 pm, "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote:
http://nsidc.org/data/seaice_index/i...timeseries.png

That wasn't in the script. Arctic Ice really on the up despite record
global high satellite temperatures. Nothing is what it seems apparently


It's a snapshot Lawrence..........it's due to synoptics and it has
nothing to do with any script, or any trend. You just don't learn.

The last snapshot you posted, exactly 10 days ago was the day of the
probable 2010 maximum and it has decreased, albeit slowly and
erratically, since then. You did say that Arctic Ice was heading
towards the mean. It wasn't, it isn't and the likelihood of it
reaching the mean at any time this melt season is as remote as the
MetO giving you a sinecure (look it up). The present state of Arctic
sea ice is completely typical of this time of year at the end of the
freezing season. Well below the 30-year mean - as it will be at the
end of the melt season. The only question is how low will the 2010
minimum be. So there. *))

http://www.ijis.iarc.uaf.edu/en/home/seaice_extent.htm




Of course when the global temperatures start to fall again we should see the
ice at both ends of the globe increase.



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Old March 19th 10, 07:08 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
Col Col is offline
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Dawlish wrote:
On Mar 18, 9:13 pm, "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote:
http://nsidc.org/data/seaice_index/i...timeseries.png

That wasn't in the script. Arctic Ice really on the up despite record
global high satellite temperatures. Nothing is what it seems
apparently


It's a snapshot Lawrence..........it's due to synoptics and it has
nothing to do with any script, or any trend. You just don't learn.

The last snapshot you posted, exactly 10 days ago was the day of the
probable 2010 maximum and it has decreased, albeit slowly and
erratically, since then. You did say that Arctic Ice was heading
towards the mean. It wasn't, it isn't and the likelihood of it
reaching the mean at any time this melt season is as remote as the
MetO giving you a sinecure (look it up). The present state of Arctic
sea ice is completely typical of this time of year at the end of the
freezing season. Well below the 30-year mean - as it will be at the
end of the melt season. The only question is how low will the 2010
minimum be. So there. *))

http://www.ijis.iarc.uaf.edu/en/home/seaice_extent.htm


And the extent of the ice maximum shows little correlation with
that year's minimum.
--
Col

Bolton, Lancashire
160m asl


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Old March 19th 10, 08:06 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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On Mar 19, 7:08*am, "Col" wrote:
Dawlish wrote:
On Mar 18, 9:13 pm, "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote:
http://nsidc.org/data/seaice_index/i...timeseries.png


That wasn't in the script. Arctic Ice really on the up despite record
global high satellite temperatures. Nothing is what it seems
apparently


It's a snapshot Lawrence..........it's due to synoptics and it has
nothing to do with any script, or any trend. You just don't learn.


The last snapshot you posted, exactly 10 days ago was the day of the
probable 2010 maximum and it has decreased, albeit slowly and
erratically, since then. You did say that Arctic Ice was heading
towards the mean. It wasn't, it isn't and the likelihood of it
reaching the mean at any time this melt season is as remote as the
MetO giving you a sinecure (look it up). The present state of Arctic
sea ice is completely typical of this time of year at the end of the
freezing season. Well below the 30-year mean - as it will be at the
end of the melt season. The only question is how low will the 2010
minimum be. So there. *))


http://www.ijis.iarc.uaf.edu/en/home/seaice_extent.htm


And the extent of the ice maximum shows little correlation with
that year's minimum.
--
Col

Bolton, Lancashire
160m asl- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Often Col. See 2006 especially and the pattern of many other years
through the melt season. I'll bet the NSIDC say something very similar
in their end of season update - unusual synoptics.

http://www.ijis.iarc.uaf.edu/en/home/seaice_extent.htm

Lawrence won't learn from that and at some stage during the next few
months when ice melt has slowed (which it will, at some time) he'll
provide another snapshot to say how it is not going to "script"; then
won't be able to back up what he's said.

These snapshot threads really are Groundhog Day in nature and there
will be more. Lawrence has to try something to counter the fact that
global temperatures are still rising. Any evidence of a place,
somewhere on earth, which is not increasing in temperature that day is
evidence to him. Instead of cooling, it's now evidence that "something
is up" with the climate.

Well, yes there is: it's warming up.

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Old March 19th 10, 07:56 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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On 18 Mar, 22:40, "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote:
"Simon S" wrote in message

...





On 18 Mar, 21:56, "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote:
"Dawlish" wrote in message


...
On Mar 18, 9:13 pm, "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote:


http://nsidc.org/data/seaice_index/i...timeseries.png


That wasn't in the script. Arctic Ice really on the up despite record
global high satellite temperatures. Nothing is what it seems apparently


It's a snapshot Lawrence..........it's due to synoptics and it has
nothing to do with any script, or any trend. You just don't learn.


The last snapshot you posted, exactly 10 days ago was the day of the
probable 2010 maximum and it has decreased, albeit slowly and
erratically, since then. You did say that Arctic Ice was heading
towards the mean. It wasn't, it isn't and the likelihood of it
reaching the mean at any time this melt season is as remote as the
MetO giving you a sinecure (look it up). The present state of Arctic
sea ice is completely typical of this time of year at the end of the
freezing season. Well below the 30-year mean - as it will be at the
end of the melt season. The only question is how low will the 2010
minimum be. So there. *))


http://www.ijis.iarc.uaf.edu/en/home/seaice_extent.htm


So when you pontificated on low ice levels that wasn't a snapshot.


You are one hypocritical son of a bitch and thats fightin' talk in Dodge
Sydenham


Why do I waste my life reading these threads I never seem to learn.


Why do I bother replying to people who regretted reading my thread-I never
seem to learn- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Got a bite .... :-)


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