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Here in the Mediterranean region, for example, the temperature during the Roman optimum around 2000 years ago was around 2.5° higher than it is today.
Does that seem like it would be nicer? The Mediterranean is portrayed as a fairly optimal climate.
The other thing to bear in mind is that the warming will mostly act on winter lows. so it might be 5 or 10 degrees warmer at night in January, but otherwise about the same. That certainly sounds nice to me.
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I'm no meteorologist or chemist, but how these freaks in Davos managed to correlate the climate and temperature fluctuations of the planet with man-made CO2 emissions is still a media mystery to me today
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They do correlate pretty strongly, but the temporal lag indicates that it's actual rising temperatures that increase CO2 levels, rather than the opposite. That's likely because warmer water retains less dissolved CO2.
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Solar activity, ‘milankovitch’ cycles have a big effect on temperatures. I’ve heard Solar scientists call out the nonsense that CO2 is driving temperatures. CO2 change is a down stream effect of temperature change as you say.
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There's also some newer work on latent heat in the Earth's mantel and core. There are geophysical cycles where more mantel is melting than solidifying, which releases latent heat to the surface.
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That sounds plausible to me
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