Here's another global warming denier....
More and more are coming out of the woodwork...this one's a geologist..
Al Pekarek doesn't like being called a denier.
Rather, the associate geology professor at St. Cloud State University says he's seeking scientific truth amid the "media circus" he believes the global warming issue has become in recent years.
For the past 12 years, Pekarek has read everything he can find about climate change.
His conclusion — that the Earth has been getting warmer, but humans aren't causing it — puts him at odds with mainstream public opinion and much of the scientific community.
None of that seems to faze Pekarek, who keeps a sign in his office that reads, "Geologists own climate history."
Just because there appears to be a consensus among scientists that humans are causing climate change by producing greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide doesn't make it true, Pekarek said. Four hundred years ago, there was a consensus that the Earth was flat, he said.
"Climate is a very complex system, and anyone who claims we know all there is to know about it, let's say, is charitably misinformed or chooses to be," Pekarek said. "We fool ourselves if we think we have a sufficiently well-understood model of the climate that we can really predict. We can't."
Pekarek's conclusion is that the Earth is definitely warmer and the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has increased. But there's no proof those changes are caused by human activity, he says.
"Geologists know that the Earth's climate has done this all the time in its history," Pekarek said. "We also know that man has not been around very long and could not have caused that. So we know that there are many natural forces that have caused our climate to change."
Pekarek's theory is that the warming effect is caused by solar activity such as sun spots, which affect cloud cover. Pekarek believes solar activity is decreasing and the Earth will enter a cooling period within the next few years — even if humans keep pumping more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
"That's the grand experiment," he said. "Give me five or 10 years and I'll have the answer."
1 Comments:
This demonstrates once more that popular opinion, even the wisdom of the learned, does not necessarily represent the truth.
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