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Subject: Re: and the snows of kilimanjaro....are soon to be no more :(
From: Southlander posted Tue, Nov 3 2009, 5:40am 
Artic ice melting, glaciers worldwide disappearing but there is no global warming some contend. I think it is already far too late to even wake up at this point.
Subject: Re: and the snows of kilimanjaro....are soon to be no more :(
From: Iprymate posted Tue, Nov 3 2009, 9:25pm 
Snow and ice are nice for Christmas but the winter months are punishing on all life, so consider any warming change an epic springtime, more plants and animals adapting and thriving in newly open lands that once only contained a few desperate versions of temperate species. Coasts ridden with condos will be fresh wetlands. With enough CO2 plants will become sentient and weed out the humans who complain, who can't use volcanoes politically. Hopefully the ocean breezes will shift so Antarctica's coat will melt and maybe the Sahara will bloom again. With enough climate change the planet could thrive. Let's thaw out the mountain tops then bring heat to the moons of Jupiter. Selling my snow shovel cheap, soon to be a collector's item. Hemingway loved the world so much he blew his head off to eliminate his carbon footprint. If warm beer is the price to pay for an end to human overpopulation, I will drink it.
Subject: Re: and the snows of kilimanjaro....are soon to be no more :(
From: john80c posted Wed, Nov 4 2009, 5:30am 
It would be great for the sahara to go back to savannah and plenty of rain-maybe then African drought would be a thing of the past
Subject: Re: and the snows of kilimanjaro....are soon to be no more :(
From: DrBaz posted Tue, Nov 3 2009, 11:51pm 
Not "some"... many scientists, myself included, simply laugh at some of the "evidence" bandied about. Climate changes, it's as simple as that. The snows will fade away, and they'll return, just as they have for millions of years all over the world.
Subject: Re: and the snows of kilimanjaro....are soon to be no more :(
From: Southlander posted Wed, Nov 4 2009, 7:22am 
Well I am not a scientist and I am not sure about the theories and such. I suspect it is a natural shift. After all Greenland was named such for a reason and the vinyards once there are well documented after all. I do wonder if the rate is affected by people or not. I figure at the very outside chance I will only be around 50 more years at the very most and more likely not even that long. I am hoping it doesn't get too bad between now and then. I am more worried about clean dependable drinking water than anything else, well, that and the decline of the majority of the fish in the oceans.


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