So today I see this blazing headline:
Boston Near All-Time Record With Snow Still Falling!
Well, I thought, the Boston area has been inhabited for a long time so their records must go back for centuries.
Boy was I wrong as shown in the news article:
"As of 7 a.m., Boston's official snow total was 21.8". This would rank as the 6th highest snowstorm in Boston's recorded history (well over 100 years)."
How long has the earth been here?
How long is 100 years in comparison?
And this is only the 6th highest snowstorm in those 100+ years?
Climate Myopia strikes again!
There was a similar story recently about the current mid-western drought.
The news headline said:
"Texas is in the grip of a record-breaking drought that began in the fall of 2010"
So again I asked: "How far back in history do those records go?"
A little research revealed a bit of Texas Climate Myopia as this drought is no where near record breaking.
It's barely close to the mid 1930's Dust Bowl era drought.
Believe it or not:
"While the “Dirty Thirty’s” serves as a measuring stick for present day climate change, other methods of scientific research have revealed more severe drought periods within the past 2000 years. Tree-ring growth studies in western Nebraska show the 1930’s drought was not that uncommon, and the “Dirty Thirty’s” actually pale in comparison to a 38-year drought that began in 1276, and another 26-year drought in the middle 1500’s."
"Texas is in the grip of a record-breaking drought that began in the fall of 2010" is nothing compared to a "a 38-year drought" or a "26-year drought".
But that fact is a bit "Inconvenient" isn't it?
Edited by Rogerdodger, 09 February 2013 - 11:57 AM.











