It's still an island bro. They got winds n shit.
Water has a very high specific heat capacity – the second highest among all the heteroatomic species (after ammonia), as well as a high heat of vaporization (40.65 kJ/mol or 2257 kJ/kg at the normal boiling point), both of which are a result of the extensive hydrogen bonding between its molecules. These two unusual properties allow water to moderate Earth's climate by buffering large fluctuations in temperature. According to Josh Willis, of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the oceans absorb one thousand times more heat than the atmosphere (air) and are holding 80 to 90% of the heat of global warming.[18]
It's still an island bro. They got winds n shit.
I can't fucking read. Nevermind. Feel free to berate me.
I can't fucking read. Nevermind. Feel free to berate me.
And finally (turn away, climate change tards) only 21.5% of those record highs occur in the last 30 years. Only 31% take place in the last 60 years.
Math. Weather. Spreadsheets. Penii. /geek
Also, the highest temperature ever directly recorded was apparently right here in California. How bout that.
I'm not an environmentalist, I don't know shit about climate change, so I don't debate the subject - but who else would fund studies relating to it? Maybe suncream companies, but there's still not much incentive there.On a related note, 99.9% of all climate scientists earn their living applying for government grants to study the effects of climate change.
I'm not an environmentalist, I don't know shit about climate change, so I don't debate the subject - but who else would fund studies relating to it? Maybe suncream companies, but there's still not much incentive there.