On Fri, 14 Jun 2013 22:06:31 -0500, josephus wrote:
> Paul Aubrin wrote:
>> On Fri, 14 Jun 2013 10:19:33 -0700, Claudius Denk wrote:
>>
>>> On Jun 13, 12:05 pm, gordo wrote:
>>>
>>> Gordo enunciated:
>>> "New Catalyst Neutralizes Gases Responsible for Climate Change"
>>>
>>> Claudius Denk responds:
>>> "Wouldn't it be great if there was something that removed CO2 from the
>>> atmosphere and it ran on solar energy and it produced useful products?
>>> Wouldn't that be cool?
>>
>> Chlorophyll?
>
> it would really be cool if the TREND even leveled off.
> but I dont see any signs of that.
>
>
>> MY regular plot [scatter gram]
>
> The data is *
The mensual data leads to more accuarate trends, especially if you don't
suppress arbitrarily some years and invent values for years that are
still not over.
http://cdo.ncdc.noaa.gov/pls/plclimprod/poemain.accessrouter
Convenient tools to analyse and graph time series can be found here:
http://www.r-project.org/
Learn how to use them to extract useful statistical informations instead
of your coarse and inaccurate plots.
This graph below, which shows the sliding 10 years and 30 years trends
clearly puts the "pause" in evidence:
http://cjoint.com/13ma/CCdllguxIiQ.htm
If you observe the yellow 10 years trend line, you will easily observe
that the values over the last three years have been negative and
decreasing indicating that the end of the blue curve went to a maximum
and is now decreasing.
And, finally, yes, chlorophyll is something which removes so efficiently
CO2 from the atmosphere that its current concentrations are not very
favourable for the vegetation. Higher C02 concentrations will induce the
production of more useful by products such as food for every species, but
they also tend to reduce the concentrations in a negative feedback loop.