Green Sahara: African Humid Periods Paced by Earth's Orbital ChangesGlobemaster_III wrote:QUOTE (Globemaster_III @ Mar 9 2017, 05:28 PM) again::: http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/ ... ar-AAo4kQS
after so many years and Scientists still don't know it yet, but it is so easy to pity on some one and call them denier
EPA chief could not come out and say it and Sahara desert used to be green.
I just add another year on my list that global warming scientists don't know jack.
Here's some science that indicates the sahara used to be green, but since scientists that cover this topic are by definition "global warming scientists", well I guess this information is wrong.
Unless of course we are either A. cherry picking the scientists or B. cherry picking the data.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/grl.50563/full
This shows deserts getting greener from Co2, but again, science, so toss it out.
You know what, lets just skip the science and let our kids decide what happened, because we got all the stuff we wanted and that's what matters.
Btw the new EPA chief is a lackey for industry
excerpt from NYTimes
'WASHINGTON — A legal fight to clean up tons of chicken manure
fouling the waters of Oklahoma’s bucolic northeastern corner —
much of it from neighboring Arkansas — was in full swing six
years ago when the conservative lawyer Scott Pruitt took
office as Oklahoma’s attorney general.
His response: Put on the brakes.
Rather than push for a federal judge to punish the companies
by extracting perhaps tens of millions of dollars in damages,
Oklahoma’s new chief law enforcement officer quietly
negotiated a deal to simply study the problem further.
The move came after he had taken tens of thousands of dollars
in campaign contributions from executives and lawyers for the
poultry industry.
It was one of a series of instances in which Mr. Pruitt put
cooperation with industry before confrontation as he sought to
blunt the impact of federal environmental policies in his
state — against oil, gas, agriculture and other interests. His
antipathy to federal regulation — he sued the EnvironmentalProtection Agency 14 times
— in many ways defined his tenure as Oklahoma’s attorney general.'


