At 03:16 PM 8/27/2003 -0700, you wrote:
--- William T Goodall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99994072
>
> "Europe may be breathing a sigh of relief as its
> record-breaking
> heatwave eases, but there is still plenty to worry
> about. Temperature
> changes caused by global warming are likely to
> transform agriculture on
> both sides of the Atlantic....
<snip>
> The eastern and western seaboards of the US will
> become much wetter
> over the next century, while some central states
> will become so starved
> of water that they will be unable to support
> agriculture at all. "

I'd guessed it from our drought -- Colorado is one of
the places forecast to become more arid in this
report:

"But Kansas, Colorado and Nebraska are just some of
the central states that could suffer drought, the
researchers say in two papers published in June this
year (Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, vol 117, p
73 and p 97)."

So, are the idiot developers still putting in Kentucky
bluegrass lawns instead of native prairie grasses?
-oh, yeah.  >:/

Debbi
Seems This Year's European Grape Harvest Is Good
However Maru  (not that i drink enough wine for it to
matter to me maru)  :P


Colorado and Nebraksa? You mean the states that have active sand dunes? Now how could sand be there, if drought is caused by global warming? Could it be natural hundred and thousand year cycles causing drought and wet conditions? Nah, that's too easy (and there's no money to be made off of it).

http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/paleo/drought/drght_data.html


Kevin T. - VRWC How dry I am...

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