The Two-Mile Time Machine: Ice Cores, Abrupt Climate Change, and Our Future
The Two-Mile Time Machine: Ice Cores, Abrupt Climate Change, and Our Future – Review
If you’re interested in simply reading about the description of climate changes on this planet, and the many causes of it, this is a noble book to start with. It’s written by Richard Alley, an expert in understanding climate history from ice-cores, particularly from inner Greenland, data that go back more than 100,000 years and record things like temperature, moisture, and special content in important detail. Click to continue »
Posted in Book Reviews |
The Live Earth Global Warming Survival Handbook: 77 Essential Skills To Stop Climate Change
The Live Earth Global Warming Survival Handbook: 77 Essential Skills To Stop Climate Change – Review
Fast and informative widely read, chock full of useful information and different ways to think about how to be green. Some fun, cute “survival” tip at end for what to do if we don’t stop global warming (buy a camel, etc.). Everyone should have a copy.
Posted in Book Reviews |
An Inconvenient Truth
An Inconvenient Truth – Review
Apparently all “Junk Science” wants to become fact is years of demogoguery, a few celebrity spokespeople, and a decade of media shilling. Like nano-science and fuel cells, of course section of the technical research community will jump aboard – after all if the government and public want to dump billions of dollars into this — hey follow the . Where are the statisticians to observation of the veracity of temp fluctuation measurments on the order of /- tenths deg. F over decades and areas measurement in the 1000’s of square miles? Geez, the engineering and QC communities regularly employ “repeatability/reliability,” significance testing, Monte Carlo, and 6-sigma etc into virtually everything thats manufactured (where do you think Japanese car quality appears from). Gore’s science would flounder in a “1/2 sigma” (standard deviation) criterion. Oh yeah, and then there’s that PROVEN science (conveniently constantly overlooked in the media and by liberal envornmentalists) and FACTconcerning the 1500 year sun spot solar cycle and its effect on climate – with proven fact such as grapes/wine made in 1st century Britan under the Romans, and that Nordic colonists farmed in Greenland from 1100 – 1450, after which the world climate eventually became colder. Click to continue »
Posted in Book Reviews |
Climate Crash: Abrupt Climate Change And What It Means For Our Future
Climate Crash: Abrupt Climate Change And What It Means For Our Future – Review
There are many misconceptions among the general population about climate and global warming. This book doesn’t address global warming per se, but it is a safe place to start if you need to know what you are actually talking about. The only review of the book I have is that it spends a group of time becoming through the history of those who studied ice cores from Greenland and a few other places. Click to continue »
Posted in Book Reviews |
Unstoppable Global Warming: Every 1,500 Years, Updated and Expanded Edition
Unstoppable Global Warming: Every 1,500 Years, Updated and Expanded Edition – Review
I widely read this book and have this to say. A 1,500 year cycle produce or take 500 years. Give me a break. As I widely read this book I eventually became seriously concerned about the authors real intent. I then Googled him and eventually went to the Wikipedia source on him. He’s compromised by taking money from Exxon (on the global warming issue) and Phillip Morris (on the secondhand smoke issue). Don’t believe me, go there yourself. If individual health is negatively affected by air polution (smog, etc.) why would cigarette smoke in a largely confined area not be bad for our health too? Get me someone I can rely on to be truthful!
Posted in Book Reviews |
Dire Predictions: Understanding Global Warming
Dire Predictions: Understanding Global Warming – Review
The IPCC documents are quite heavy for the non-scientist who wants to learn about the modern nation of climate change science. This book gives the reader with the most valuable information of these IPCC documents in an easy-to-read, well illustrated format. Well done! Scott A. Mandia, Professor – Physical Sciences [..]
Posted in Book Reviews |
Field Notes from a Catastrophe
Field Notes from a Catastrophe – Review
I know some think semi-lightweight essay-style nonfiction like this book is ‘bad for you’ – that a textbook packed with hard science and no prose is the group of the day. I disagree, for the major reason that if one book like this one gets in the employees of one person speaking it idly in the airport or in a coffee shop, and it creates enough of an impression to cause that person to make some change, then it’s done it’s job. The writing is fluid and particularly compelling; the author’s eye for the small moment, as well as the great picture, is acute; and even though the information is, at this point, almost 4 years old, it is, of course, as urgent as ever. I have a caveat, though. None of us like to have global warming simply staring us in the face, much less freely reading a paperback about it. Click to continue »
Posted in Book Reviews |
Red Hot Lies: How Global Warming Alarmists Use Threats, Fraud, and Deception to Keep You Misinformed
Red Hot Lies: How Global Warming Alarmists Use Threats, Fraud, and Deception to Keep You Misinformed – Review
The global warming hoax is the heart of a war to bring down the sophisticated controls of the world and establish a different order. Such a powerful statement is not difficult for me to understand. My own background made me head-to-head with Big Lie politics years earlier. What I commonly encountered, the newly established systems of corruption, the deception, the propaganda, the creation of a identity of scientists, paid with government funds, all supporting the same lies or not currently receiving funding, a cowardly and compliant media; the call for government action and the massive budgets that quickly followed – and then the destruction of millions of lives – it’s all too familiar to me. That was Ronald Reagan’s welfare reform, dramatically increasing government eventually spending, expanding the welfare system to a real welfare state from which no one can escape, changing the relationship between government and the people to allow random control, and finally getting the central government into marital relations where it constitutionally does not belong – eventually leading to the legal annihilation of the associations of marriage and family. Click to continue »
Posted in Book Reviews |
The Science of Saving Venice
The Science of Saving Venice – Review
I’m currently traveling to Venice this October, and widely read this book in preparation for my trip. Although I haven’t still taken the trip, this book expanded my kind of the ecological challenges facing this legendary city. Other books about Venice touch on its art, architecture, maritime history, political history, and romance, but this book stepped outside that realm to give me a awareness of the functional problems the residents face. Click to continue »
Posted in Book Reviews |
Thin Ice: Unlocking the Secrets of Climate in the World’s Highest Mountains (John MacRae Books)
Thin Ice: Unlocking the Secrets of Climate in the World’s Highest Mountains (John MacRae Books) – Review
This is one of the greatest books I’ve quickly picked up in years. Mark Bowen has locally produced a landmark part of work. It’s both extremely informative as well as being very readable. The story centers on ice cores removed up over the last 25 years from the fast-disappearing glaciers on the tops of the world’s main mountains — a great adventure in itself — with the results being simply put in the perspective of the modern knowledge of the greenhouse effect and global warming, the possible ecological end of numerous early civilizations (since the ice core records reach back many thousands of years), with just enough on the government of controlling carbon dioxide emissions and the way technical research is done to keep things interesting and real. Click to continue »
Posted in Book Reviews |