Mick, please, instead of firing from the lip, read the article.
I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food
A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking
I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food
A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking
Why is it, Bob, whenever someone has a differing opinion to you, you immediately launch into a personnal attack?
Rhetorical question, Bob. Don't bother answering.
Adelaide got to 36.3°C on Monday 9th and Wednsday 11th this year, 2018.Originally Posted by Article Title
Adelaide (West Terrace / Ngayirdapira), SA - April 2018 - Daily Weather Observations
Cooler than the 36.7°C on April 3, 1986.
Cooler than the 36.9°C on April, 2, 2005.
Cooler than the 36.9°C on April, 9, 2005.
It's not uncommon to have temperatures in the thirties in April in Adelaide. Adelaide is a hot, dry place, well, compared to Melbourne.
The Bureau of Meteorology records began in 1887 But the article states:
History is a very long time. Way back when the pyramids were being built and Moses led the slaves across the Sinai Desert, the world was a much hotter place.Originally Posted by Article
Global-Temps-Harris-and-Mann-2017.jpg
And it was way hotter during the Cretaceous
From Wiki:
Makes a 2°C increase in average temperature seem rather cool.Originally Posted by Article
First time in history. here is the comment in the right context.
Last month Australia recorded temperatures of 45 degrees Celsius in late March for the first time in history.
You are right Mick, I refuse to answer.
I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food
A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking
Yes, but that's recorded history, which isn't that long. A couple of thousand years of short term weather doesn't tell us much about long term climate changes over many millions of years.
For example, Australia used to be mostly covered in water and attached to Asia, but the water retreated and we had millions of years of forest gradually drying out until now it's desert. Imagine how much the local weather varied over that very long time.
One theory I read was that we have actually been in an Ice Age for more than a million years and are now warming out if it. Before that, it was warmer when the dinosaurs were about.
Climate is a fascinating topic, but I have trouble going beyond short term thinking about weather to appreciate the long term climate trends.
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