Quote:
Originally Posted by poopdeckpappy
1. 0.01% rise mostly caused by solor flares and sun spots
2. Dr Kai-Uwe Hinrichs and WHOI
3. What was released was 90 million tons (est), not by temp but by possible undersea landslide, dosen't matter how it was released, the effect is still the same, higher global temps
4. You are correct about it being my opinion, as best you can tell and I'm not a climate scientist, as far as you know
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I don't doubt that GHG's are being released from melting permafrost. That is of course how interglacial cycles last so long. They are historically kicked off by short term warming events (like Milankovich cycles) then spread out over thousands of years by released GHG's.
What you are presumably trying to claim, is that the flux of solar radiation has increased to such a magnitude as to kick off an anomalous interglacial cycle. Well, your work is cut out for you then. You need to;
1. Quantify the increased solar forcing in W/m^2
2. Show that man-released GHG's have a much smaller radiative forcing than is currently calculated (good luck).
3. Match the increased magnitude of solar forcing with the observed warming.