03/26/07
Russian blames global warming on 1908 Tunguska Event -
Categories: Weather and Climate -
twv
@ 04:33:23 pm
I've been waiting for this, the Tunguska Theory:
A new theory to explain global warming was revealed at a meeting at the University of Leicester (UK) and is being considered for publication in the journal "Science First Hand". The controversial theory has nothing to do with burning fossil fuels and atmospheric carbon dioxide levels. According to Vladimir Shaidurov of the Russian Academy of Sciences, the apparent rise in average global temperature recorded by scientists over the last hundred years or so could be due to atmospheric changes that are not connected to human emissions of carbon dioxide from the burning of natural gas and oil. Shaidurov explained how changes in the amount of ice crystals at high altitude could damage the layer of thin, high altitude clouds found in the mesosphere that reduce the amount of warming solar radiation reaching the earth's surface.
Shaidurov has used a detailed analysis of the mean temperature change by year for the last 140 years and explains that there was a slight decrease in temperature until the early twentieth century. This flies in the face of current global warming theories that blame a rise in temperature on rising carbon dioxide emissions since the start of the industrial revolution. Shaidurov, however, suggests that the rise, which began between 1906 and 1909, could have had a very different cause, which he believes was the massive Tunguska Event, which rocked a remote part of Siberia, northwest of Lake Baikal on the 30th June 1908.
Wouldn't it be strange were this to turn out to be the real source of recent climate changes?
I doubt if I'm the only person to have waited for this theory. I mean, how many History Channel and Discover Channel documentaries about the Tunguska Event do you have to watch before you begin to ask the obvious question?
Still, waiting for the theory to be floated, and accepting it, are two entirely different things.
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