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Mind blown !

The difference, is what it has always been, sometimes little different, sometimes a rapid, and sudden change.
Really? The only comparable rate of change I've heard of is meteor strikes or supervolcanos. When are you thinking of?

I don't think it was you but one of the usual idiots posted a graph showing 'rapid' changes in temperature where the width of a pixel in the image was something like 2 million years.
 
Not for you because you wont have any snow to slide down
We go to the higher up, glacier resorts, so we're OK. I did once ski on grass in Morzine,a few years ago. Weirdly, Morzine had more snow than ever last season...:unsure:
 
There was the Younger Dryas event.
Interesting, closer to the supervolcano though as it's thought that a lake larger than most countries suddenly dumped itself into the Atlantic Ocean. It also wasn't a global warming or cooling event as whole the Northern hemisphere got cooler the southern hemisphere got hotter.
 
CLIMATE DENIER **CLIMATE DENIER***
Actually, it's the opposite.

If you'd paid attention, then you'd know that extremes of weather i.e. floods, droughts, storms, (bush) fires, blizzards, heatwaves etc are all part of the whole climate catastrophe.
 
Really? The only comparable rate of change I've heard of is meteor strikes or supervolcanos. When are you thinking of?

Between the 13th and 11th centuries BCE, most Greek Bronze Age Palatial centers were destroyed and/or abandoned. The following centuries were typified by low population levels. Data from oxygen-isotope speleothems, stable carbon isotopes, alkenone-derived sea surface temperatures, and changes in warm-species dinocysts and formanifera in the Mediterranean indicate that the Early Iron Age was more arid than the preceding Bronze Age. A sharp increase in Northern Hemisphere temperatures preceded the collapse of Palatial centers, a sharp decrease occurred during their abandonment. Mediterranean Sea surface temperatures cooled rapidly during the Late Bronze Age, limiting freshwater flux into the atmosphere and thus reducing precipitation over land. These climatic changes could have affected Palatial centers that were dependent upon high levels of agricultural productivity. Declines in agricultural production would have made higher-density populations in Palatial centers unsustainable. The ‘Greek Dark Ages’ that followed occurred during prolonged arid conditions that lasted until the Roman Warm Period.
 
Correct. It's why I didn't vote for Brexit and plan to leave this mortal coil, come what may.

One does what one can.
Ah, well if it is all for your own entertainment then hats off to you.
Whatever floats your boat, I suppose.
 
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