Yet Another Challenge to Bad Science in Kyoto
Canada's Financial Post has an excellent article with links to 27 (yes, twenty-seven) other articles on the same subject. This artcle zeros in on mud-core samples off the lower mainland of British Columbia, and with that evidence in hand, then correlates known solar variance with their findings. It goes on to recap the theory that low solar output allows more cosmic rays more cosmic rays become cloud-chamber-like nuclei for cloud formation the kinds of clouds formed reflect heat and the earth cools. So, even though the amount of energy sent our way from the Sun decreases a little, there's a greater influence on Earth's climate as a result of that solar variance. The author finds his skepticism to the very political science trumpeted by Algore and the Kyoto gang is not alone in the scientific community: In a 2003 poll conducted by German environmental researchers Dennis Bray and Hans von Storch, two-thirds of more than 530 climate scientists from 27 countries surveyed did ...