Amazingly you ignore the physics. When a black body such as the greenhouse
layer gets black it achieves a maximum radiative output and feedback to the
surface independent of how thick or concentrated it is. When the greenhouse
gases in the atmosphere reach that level, putting in more greenhouse does
not increase the greenhouse effect. The natural positive feedback of
increasing CO2 levels saturates and the Earth's surface temperature no
longer increases as a result of greenhouse effects. In the past the
asymptotic average temperature has been about 25 C except about 250 million
years ago when extensive lava flows in the area of Siberia (an asteroid
impact near Antarctica triggered it) caused additional heating of several
degrees and virtual extinction of surface life.

  _____  

From: Veli Albert Kallio [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, June 12, 2009 8:54 AM
To: [email protected]; John Nissen; [email protected]
Cc: Geoengineering FIPC
Subject: RE: [geo] Re: Back to Nature


Of the various views: 
 
One needs to keep in mind that the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM),
55 million years ago was effectively an "ALLDEAD" scenario where the release
of carbon was not having any human help. A natural and an instrumented
release of carbon totally different.
 
It certainly is the greatest risk is that we continue to exhaust all the
combustible carbon resources with an efficiency that will far exceed any
natural event in the past that could have simultaneously released the
fossilised carbon out of highly different geological stratum.
 
The instrumented release of CO2 added to the natural positive CO2 feedbacks
(i.e. such that occurred during the PETM), means the natural releases now
taking place on top of the anthropogenic, instrumented CO2 release,
constitutes a possibility of reduced rate of recovery unlike the PETM. There
were no instrumented releases during PETM to empty CO2 from the rock strata
of many geological ages at once.  What needs to be understood is what
triggered the PETM releases and can the human activity to restart this
behemoth?
 
David Keith's effective half-life of anthropogenic CO2 is many thousands of
years as the geological system gets clogged beyond much larger anthropogenic
concentration than at present, potentially opening a time for the massive
releases of methane from the Arctic to be released. The climatic forcing,
therefore, skyrocketing by several Watts/m-2.  
 
It is important to remember that the positive GHG feedbacks of PETM were
effectively "ALLDEAD" scenarios with all carbon being released by the
natural knock-on positive feedback effects alone. The man made exploitation
of fossil fuel resources is a vital addition to the sum cumulative of the
natural feed backs that could never have extracted carbon with same
efficiency and geological stratum as fossil fuel exploitation has done.
 
Therefore, it is irresponsible to state that the situation would stop at
PETM levels, though substantial enough to justify the drastic actions, but
as hydrological structures might become substantially altered in very much
higher temperatures total pandemonium is conceivable and only appropriate to
consider as the outcome. It bears to be kept constantly in mind that at one
point the Mediterranean Sea dried to the bottom, and were the temperatures
raised high enough the imbalance of liquid water and vapour could change. 
 
On changed conditions of substantial evaporation, sea floor pressures
reverse and these kind of changes probably also helped the Paleocene-Eocene
Thermal Maximum positive CO2 feedback if the sea water warmed very
substantially, water then evaporating far more and CO2 seeping out of seas
and volcanoes.  This is an ALLDEAD-scenario with depressurised sea floor
macro-fracturisation and volcanic seepages. But even PETM could not release
fossilised carbon, only the carbon on sea water and exposed soils due to
forestry die back and decay.  
 
More evaporation means also more flooding, and decay, these forces releasing
carbon from land in far advanced global warming systems where forest died
but soils continue to decay.
 
Therefore, the super-hot state could occur and the Earth move beyond PETM
state to ALLDEAD state due to the additional infrared hue of anthropogenic,
instrumented release. But as there is no one then around to see it, I do not
see too much point imagining what such a world as envisioned by Steven
Hawkins +280C or James Lovelock +58C would be.
 
But instrumented all-across-board geological stratum GHG releases did not
occur during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum, 55 Myr ago that is for
sure. (So, equally sure, we are not bound by any PETM ceiling of natural
feedbacks 'dying out' to a level of dinosaur climate where we could still
put sun screen on the South Pole.)
 
With kind regards,

Veli Albert Kallio, FRGS
 

  _____  

From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]; [email protected]
CC: [email protected]
Subject: [geo] Re: Back to Nature
Date: Thu, 11 Jun 2009 20:12:47 -0400


I think you owe it to yourself to study (it takes only a few minutes) the
website  www.scotese.com <http://www.scotese.com/>    Christopher Scotese is
a well known, well respected geologist. Click on Climate and study the
climate history for the past 540 million years (most of that time without
humans). You will quickly be disabused of ideas that the warming continues
to a super hot state. It gets into dinosaur temperature range but not
beyond.

  _____  

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of John Nissen
Sent: Thursday, June 11, 2009 6:37 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [geo] Re: Back to Nature



No, it's all wrong - about the CO2 being absorbed from the atmosphere and
the planet cooling.  On the contrary, if we were all to drop dead tomorrow,
global warming would continue for thousands of years, as I explain in the
thread I started, about the GREAT LIE.  There'd also be an immediate warming
spurt, as  the sulphur aerosol pollution (which has a cooling effect) would
be quickly washed out of the atmosphere.  And,within a few decades, on top
of the CO2 warming would be the warming from methane as permafrost melted,
and the sea level would rise 60-70 metres as Greenland and Antarctic ice
sheets melted.

Thus, if we disappear, or just carry on as we are for that matter, the Earth
will continue tipping into a super-hot state, which probably won't be
habitable for humans, even at the poles.  However it is unlikely that the
Earth will go the way of Venus, with the oceans boiling away, if that's any
comfort.

Cheers,

John

---

Alvia Gaskill wrote: 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aftermath:_Population_Zero
 
I recently saw the Nat. Geo program "Aftermath: Population Zero," one of
several hypothetical accounts of what the world would be like without
people.  Not less people, no people.   These seem to have been inspired by
the work of Alan Weisman, author of the book "The World Without Us."
 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_World_Without_Us
 
In addition to describing what would happen to domesticated animals and pets
left without humans to take care of them, the fate of infrastructure is also
presented.  This particular program (there is another one that has been
turned into a series on the History Channel called, appropriately enough,
"Life After People"  
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_After_People ;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_After_People:_The_Series  [for those
people still not depressed enough after watching the original documentary])
also explores changes in the Earth's climate without its number one
interferent, us.
 
After 150 years, winters are colder than during the last days of humans with
greater snowfall, indicating declining GHG levels.  It is stated that the
oceans will remove 13.5Gt of CO2 per year.  Is this correct?
 
After 200 years, the excess CO2 from human emissions is completely
eliminated by plants and trees.  Don't tell David Archer.  Perhaps the
increase in plant growth will speed the removal.  Or won't that matter?
 
After 500 years, forests return to the state they had 10,000 years ago.  I
doubt that one, as that would have been at the tail end of the ice age.
 
After 25,000 years, the interglacial is over, the ice sheets return and
erase NYC along with most of the areas wiped out before.  Which raises an
interesting question for the geo haters.  If it became apparent that the
interglacial was ending, would you be in favor of artificial means of
prolonging it to ensure the planet's habitability for billions of humans?
If you say no, then I think I'm going to propose to Nat. Geo or History a
new series, Life After YOU People!
 
 
 



<BR



  _____  

Beyond Hotmail - see what else you can do with Windows Live. Find out
<http://clk.atdmt.com/UKM/go/134665375/direct/01/> more. 

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