Jim Hughes wrote:terstorm1012 wrote:I dunno Jim, I really agree with both you and X-Y-No! There's something that tells me that you're both on the same page and just not seeing it.
Is it possible, since greenhouse emissions keep solar energy from escaping back into space, that increased solar energy could aid an accelerated global warming (caused by 6billion+ humans and their industry)?
I really think that there is, and you've both presented data that proves this to me.
One last thing---Jim---Pinatubo Eruption caused cooling not warming as i recall.... The summer that followed it was the chilliest in decades. I remember it as the one summer we didn't go to the pool at all because it was too cold. It also was, incidentally, the summer of Andrew. I could be wrong though.
terstorm1012,
If you go back over my earlier comments in this thread or some of my other past comments in one of my AMO discussion you will see that I have said that the global warmers' can make a strong case about global warming by way of it effecting ozone levels. (Thinning it )
So I have no problem with that stance. Although then we need to look at what caused some earlier warming trends and why did that ozone deplete then because they seem to go hand and hand.
Your right Pinatubo did cause a cooling effect down below but it caused a warming trend in the lower stratosphere just like all major volcanic eruptions. So here we go again.
We have always thought that this cooling was only caused by the blocking of the sunlight. But could this also be related to the warming of the stratosphere, which then changes the teleconnection feedbacks, which then causes a cooling in the lower troposphere ?
This is exactly what changes in the ozone levels do. They cause temperatuee gradients in the stratosphere and this has an effect upon the troposhere by way of atmospheric and oceanic teleconnection feedbacks.
Jim
Makes sense.
I did not know about the stratospheric warming. Thanks for clueing me into this.