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Cambio climático: 450 estudios "peer reviewed" escépticos

Cualquiera que haya discutido con unos de los innumerables mamporrerillos del alarmismo climático, ha padecido la misma trampa: la pretensión de que nada de lo que alegues vale si no viene con el marchamo de una publicación “peer reviewed”.

Las revistas científicas más importantes son manifiestamente partidarias de lo que quiera que apoye la “onda principal” de los científicos de cada ramo. Después de todo viven de algo tan sutil como el prestigio, y eso no se conserva dandole coces a los burócratas de las academias, ni a los políticos que deciden la cantidad y el sesgo de la inversión pública en ciencia. no son precisamente imparciales.

Por ejemplo, en lo del cambio climático, uno de los factores más importantes, y al tiempo más desconocidos, es el efecto de las nubes sobre la temperatura global, y la discusión no resuelta sobre si actúan como un ampificador o como un freno a un aumento de temperatura por cualquier causa -CO2, sol, corrientes marinas, lo que sea. Y lo primero que se observa es la facilidad para publicar artículos que defienden el efecto amplificador, y la dificultad para publicar artículos que defienden su efecto freno. Y así con todos y cada uno de los aspectos de la discusión climática.

Peer_review_Cartoon

Con ese truco, el sesgo de la literatura “peer reviewed”, y el del falso “consenso”, pretenden ganar todas las discusiones. Pero ha salido un listado por temas muy interesante en PopularTechnology, útil para el que quiera buscar un artículo “santificado” a pesar del rodillo del pretendido consenso. Enlace –>. También se reproduce aquí:

A 2000-year global temperature reconstruction based on non-treering proxies (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Numbers 7-8, pp. 1049-1058, December 2007)

A Climate of Doubt about Global Warming (Environmental Geosciences, Volume 7 Issue 4, pp. 213, December 2000)

  • Robert C. Balling Jr.

A comparison of tropical temperature trends with model predictions (PDF) (International Journal of Climatology, Volume 28, Issue 13, pp. 1693-1701, December 2007)

A critical review of the hypothesis that climate change is caused by carbon dioxide (Energy & Environment, Volume 11, Number 6, pp. 631-638, November 2000)

  • Heinz Hug

A new dynamical mechanism for major climate shifts (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 34, Issue 13, July 2007)

  • Anastasios A. Tsonis, Kyle Swanson, Sergey Kravtsov

A scientific agenda for climate policy? (PDF) (Nature, Volume 372, Issue 6505, pp. 400-402, December 1994)

  • Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen

A test of corrections for extraneous signals in gridded surface temperature data (PDF) (Climate Research, Volume 26, Number 2, pp. 159-173, May 2004)

Altitude dependence of atmospheric temperature trends: Climate models versus observation (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Issue 13, July 2004)

  • David H. Douglass, Benjamin D. Pearson, S. Fred Singer

An Alternative Explanation for Differential Temperature Trends at the Surface and in the Lower Troposphere (PDF) (Submitted to the Journal of Geophysical Research, February 2009)

  • Philip J. Klotzbach, Roger A. Pielke Sr., Roger A. Pielke Jr., John R. Christy, Richard T. McNider

An assessment of validation experiments conducted on computer models of global climate using the general circulation model of the UK’s Hadley Centre (Energy & Environment, Volume 10, Number 5, pp. 491-502, September 1999)

  • Richard S. Courtney

Analysis of trends in the variability of daily and monthly historical temperature measurements (PDF) (Climate Research, Volume 10, Number 1, pp. 27-33, April 1998)

  • Patrick J. Michaels, Robert C. Balling Jr, Russell S. Vose, Paul C. Knappenberger

Ancient atmosphere- Validity of ice records (Environmental Science and Pollution Research, Volume 1, Number 3, September 1994)

  • Zbigniew Jaworowski

Are Climate Model Projections Reliable Enough For Climate Policy? (Energy & Environment, Volume 15, Number 3, pp. 521-525, July 2004)

  • Madhav L. Khandekar

Are observed changes in the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere really dangerous? (PDF) (Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology, Volume 50, Number 2, pp. 297-327, June 2002)

  • C. R. de Freitas

Are there connections between the Earth’s magnetic field and climate? (PDF) (Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 253, Issues 3-4, pp. 328-339, January 2007)

Atmospheric CO2 and global warming: a critical review (PDF) (Norwegian Polar Institute Letters, Volume 119, May 1992)

  • Zbigniew Jaworowski, Tom V. Segalstad, V. Hisdal

Can increasing carbon dioxide cause climate change? (PDF) (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 94, pp. 8335-8342, August 1997)

  • Richard S. Lindzen

Carbon dioxide forcing alone insufficient to explain Palaeocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum warming (Nature Geoscience, Volume 2, 576-580, July 2009)

  • Richard E. Zeebe, James C. Zachos, Gerald R. Dickens

Climate as a Result of the Earth Heat Reflection (PDF) (Latvian Journal of Physics and Technical Sciences, Volume 46, Number 2, pp. 29-40, May 2009)

  • J. Barkāns, D. Žalostība

Climate Change - A Natural Hazard (Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Numbers 2-3, pp. 215-232, May 2003)

  • William Kininmonth

Climate Change and the Earth’s Magnetic Poles, A Possible Connection (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Numbers 1-2, pp. 75-83, January 2009)

  • Adrian K. Kerton

Climate change: Conflict of observational science, theory, and politics (AAPG Bulletin, Volume 88, Number 9, pp. 1211-1220, September 2004)

Climate Change: Dangers of a Singular Approach and Consideration of a Sensible Strategy (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Numbers 1-2 , pp. 201-205, January 2009)

  • Tim F. Ball

Climate change: detection and attribution of trends from long-term geologic data (Ecological Modelling, Volume 171, Issue 4, pp. 433-450, February 2004)

  • Craig Loehle

Climate change in the Arctic and its empirical diagnostics (Energy & Environment, Volume 10, Number 5, pp. 469-482, September 1999)

  • V.V. Adamenko, K.Y. Kondratyev, C.A. Varotsos Climate Change is Nothing New! (PDF) (New Concepts In Global Tectonics, Number 42, March 2007)
  • Lance Endersbee

Climate change projections lack reality check (Weather, Volume 61, Issue 7, pp. 212, December 2006)

  • Madhav L. Khandekar

Climate Change Re-examined (PDF) (Journal of Scientific Exploration, Volume 21, Number 4, pp. 723–749, 2007)

  • Joel M. Kauffman

Climate Chaotic Instability: Statistical Determination and Theoretical Background (Environmetrics, Volume 8, Issue 5, pp. 517-532, December 1998)

  • Raymond Sneyers

Climate Dynamics and Global Change (Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics, Volume 26, pg 353-378, January 1994)

  • Richard S. Lindzen

Climate outlook to 2030 (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 5, pp. 615-619, September 2007)

  • David C. Archibald

Climate Prediction as an Initial Value Problem (PDF) (Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 79, Number 12, pp. 2743-2746, December 1998)

  • Roger A. Pielke Sr.

Climate projections: Past performance no guarantee of future skill? (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 36, Issue 13, July 2009)

  • Catherine Reifen, Ralf Toumi

Climate science and the phlogiston theory: weighing the evidence (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Numbers 3-4, pp. 441-447, July 2007)

  • Arthur Rörsch

Climate stability: an inconvenient proof (Civil Engineering, Volume 160, Issue 2, pp. 66-72, May 2007)

  • David Bellamy, Jack Barrett

Climate Variations and the Enhanced Greenhouse Effect (Ambio, Volume 27, Number 4, pp. 270-274, June 1998)

  • Wibjörn Karlén

CO2 as a primary driver of Phanerozoic climate: Comment (PDF) (GSA Today, Volume 14, Issue 7, pp. 18–18, July 2004)

  • Nir Shaviv, Jan Veizer

CO2-induced global warming: a skeptic’s view of potential climate change (PDF) (Climate Research, Volume 10, Number 1, pp. 69–82, April 1998)

  • Sherwood B. Idso

Cooling of Atmosphere Due to CO2 Emission (Energy Sources, Part A: Recovery, Utilization, and Environmental Effects, Volume 30, Issue 1, pp. 1-9, January 2008)

  • G. V. Chilingar, L. F. Khilyuk, O. G. Sorokhtin

Comment on “Examining the Scientific Consensus on Climate Change” (PDF) (Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union, Volume 90, Number 27, July 2009)

  • Roland Granqvist

Conflicting Signals of Climatic Change in the Upper Indus Basin (PDF) (Journal of Climate, Volume 19, Issue 17, pp. 4276–4293, September 2006)

  • H. J. Fowler, D. R. Archer

Cooling of the Global Ocean Since 2003 (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Numbers 1-2, pp. 101-104, January 2009)

  • Craig Loehle

Dangerous global warming remains unproven (Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 1, pp. 167-169, January 2007)

  • Robert M. Carter

Differential trends in tropical sea surface and atmospheric temperatures since 1979 (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 28, Number 1, pp. 183–186, January 2001)

  • John R. Christy, D.E. Parker, S.J. Brown, I. Macadam, M. Stendel, W.B. Norris

Disparity of tropospheric and surface temperature trends: New evidence (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Issue 13, July 2004)

  • David H. Douglass, Benjamin D. Pearson, S. Fred Singer, Paul C. Knappenberger, Patrick J. Michaels

Do deep ocean temperature records verify models? (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 29, Issue 8, pp. 95-1, April 2002)

  • Richard S. Lindzen

Do Facts Matter Anymore? (Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Numbers 2-3, pp. 323-326, May 2003)

  • Patrick J. Michaels

Do glaciers tell a true atmospheric CO2 story? (PDF) (Science of the Total Environment, Volume 114, pp. 227-284, August 1992)

  • Zbigniew Jaworowski, Tom V. Segalstad, N. Ono

Documentation of uncertainties and biases associated with surface temperature measurement sites for climate change assessment (PDF) (Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 88, Number 6, pp. 913-928, June 2007)

  • Roger A. Pielke Sr. et al.

Does a Global Temperature Exist? (PDF) (Journal of Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics, Volume 32, Issue 1, pp. 1–27, February 2007)

  • Christopher Essex, Ross McKitrick, Bjarne Andresen

Does CO2 really drive global warming? (Chemical Innovation, Volume 31, Number 5, pp 44-46, May 2001)

  • Robert H. Essenhigh

Earth’s rising atmospheric CO2 concentration: Impacts on the biosphere (Energy & Environment, Volume 12, Number 4, pp. 287-310, July 2001)

  • Craig D. Idso

Environmental Effects of Increased Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide (PDF) (Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons, Volume 12, Number 3, pp. 79-90, Fall 2007)

  • Arthur B. Robinson, Noah E. Robinson, Willie H. Soon

Environmental Effects of Increased Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide (PDF) (Climate Research, Volume 13, Number 2, pp. 149–164, October 1999)

  • Arthur B. Robinson, Zachary W. Robinson, Willie H. Soon, Sallie L. Baliunas

Estimation and representation of long-term (>40 year) trends of Northern-Hemisphere-gridded surface temperature: A note of caution (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Number 3, February 2004)

  • Willie H. Soon, David R. Legates, Sallie L. Baliunas

Evidence Delimiting Past Global Climate Changes (Environmental Geosciences, Volume 6, Issue 3, pp. 151, September 1999)

  • John P. Bluemle, Joseph M. Sabel, Wibjörn Karlén

Evidence for decoupling of atmospheric CO2 and global climate during the Phanerozoic eon (Nature, Volume 408, Issue 6813, pp. 698-701, December 2000)

  • Ján Veizer, Yves Godderis, Louis M. François

Evidence for “publication Bias” Concerning Global Warming in Science and Nature (Energy & Environment, Volume 19, Number 2, pp. 287-301, March 2008)

  • Patrick J. Michaels

Falsification Of The Atmospheric CO2 Greenhouse Effects Within The Frame Of Physics (PDF) (International Journal of Modern Physics B, Volume 23, Issue 03, pp. 275-364, January 2009)

  • Gerhard Gerlich, Ralf D. Tscheuschner

Global Climate Models Violate Scaling of the Observed Atmospheric Variability (PDF) (Physical Review Letters, Volume 89, Number 2, July 2002)

  • R. B. Govindan, Dmitry Vyushin, Armin Bunde, Stephen Brenner, Shlomo Havlin, Hans-Joachim Schellnhuber

Global Warming (PDF) (Progress in Physical Geography, Volume 27, Number 3, pp. 448-455, September 2003)

  • Willie H. Soon, Sallie L. Baliunas

Global Warming: A Reduced Threat? (PDF) (Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 73, Issue 10, pp. 1563–1577, October 1992)

  • Patrick J. Michaels, David E. Stooksbury

Global warming and long-term climatic changes: a progress report (Environmental Geology, Volume 46, Numbers 6-7, pp. 970-979, October 2004)

  • L. F. Khilyuk, G. V. Chilingar

Global Warming and the Accumulation of Carbon Dioxide in the Atmosphere (Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 1, pp. 101-126, January 2005)

  • Arthur Rörsch, Richard S. Courtney, Dick Thoenes

Global warming and the mining of oceanic methane hydrate (Topics in Catalysis, Volume 32, Numbers 3-4, pp. 95-99, March 2005)

  • Chung-Chieng Lai, David Dietrich, Malcolm Bowman

Global Warming: Correcting the Data (PDF) (Regulation, Volume 31, Number 3, pp.46-52, 2008)

  • Patrick J. Michaels

Global Warming: Forecasts by Scientists Versus Scientific Forecasts (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Numbers 7-8, pp. 997-1021, December 2007)

  • Keston C. Green, J. Scott Armstrong

Global Warming: Is Sanity Returning? (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 5, pp. 721-731, September 2009)

  • Nigel Lawson

Global Warming: Myth or Reality? The Actual Evolution of the Weather Dynamics (Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Numbers 2-3, pp. 297-322, May 2003)

  • Marcel Leroux

Global Warming: The Origin and Nature of the Alleged Scientific Consensus (PDF) (Regulation, Volume 15, Number 2, pp. 87-98, 1992)

  • Richard S. Lindzen

Grape harvest dates are poor indicators of summer warmth (PDF) (Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 87, Numbers 1-4, pp. 255-256, January 2007)

  • D. J. Keenan

Greenhouse effect in semi-transparent planetary atmospheres (PDF) (Quarterly Journal of the Hungarian Meteorological Service, Volume 111, Number 1, pp. 1-40, 2007)

  • Ferenc M. Miskolczi

Greenhouse gases and greenhouse effect (Environmental Geology, Volume 58, Issue 6, pp.1207-1213, September 2009)

  • G. V. Chilingar, O. G. Sorokhtin, L. Khilyuk, M. V. Gorfunkel

Greenhouse molecules, their spectra and function in the atmosphere (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 6, pp. 1037-1045, November 2005)

  • Jack Barrett

How Dry is the Tropical Free Troposphere? Implications for Global Warming Theory (PDF) (Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 78, Issue 6, pp. 1097–1106, June 1997)

  • Roy W. Spencer, William D. Braswell

Human effect on global climate? (Nature, Volume 384, Issue 6609, pp. 522-523, December 1996)

  • Patrick J. Michaels, Paul C. Knappenberger

Human Contribution to Climate Change Remains Questionable (Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union, Volume 80, Issue 16, pp. 183-183, April 1999)

  • S. Fred Singer

Impact of urbanization and land-use change on climate (PDF) (Nature, Volume 423, Number 6939, pp. 528-531, May 2003)

  • Eugenia Kalnay, Ming Cai

Implications of the Secondary Role of Carbon Dioxide and Methane Forcing in Climate Change: Past, Present, and Future (PDF) (Physical Geography, Volume 28, Number 2, pp. 97-125, March 2007)

  • Willie H. Soon

In defense of Milankovitch (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Number 24, December 2006)

  • Gerard Roe

Industrial CO2 emissions as a proxy for anthropogenic influence on lower tropospheric temperature trends (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Issue 5, March 2004)

  • A. T. J. de Laat, A. N. Maurellis

Influence of the Southern Oscillation on tropospheric temperature (Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 114, Issue D14, July 2009)

  • John D. McLean, Chris de Freitas, Robert M. Carter

Irreproducible Results in Thompson et al., “Abrupt Tropical Climate Change: Past and Present” (PNAS 2006) (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 3, pp. 367-373, July 2009)

  • J. Huston McCulloch

Is the enhancement of global warming important? (Energy & Environment, Volume 12, Number 4, pp. 335-341, July 2001)

  • M.C.R. Symons, Jack Barrett

Key Aspects of Global Climate Change (Energy & Environment, Volume 15, Number 3, pp. 469-503, July 2004)

  • Ya. K. Kondratyev

Limits on CO2 Climate Forcing from Recent Temperature Data of Earth (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Numbers 1-2, pp. 177-189, January 2009)

  • David H. Douglass, John R. Christy

Methodology and Results of Calculating Central California Surface Temperature Trends: Evidence of Human-Induced Climate Change? (Journal of Climate, Volume 19, Issue 4, February 2006)

  • John R. Christy, W.B. Norris, K. Redmond, K. Gallo

Microclimate Exposures of Surface-Based Weather Stations: Implications For The Assessment of Long-Term Temperature Trends (PDF) (Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 86, Issue 4, April 2005)

  • Christopher A. Davey, Roger A. Pielke Sr.

Modeling climatic effects of anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions: unknowns and uncertainties (PDF) (Climate Research, Volume 18, Number 3, pp. 259–275, November 2001)

Multi-scale analysis of global temperature changes and trend of a drop in temperature in the next 20 years (Meteorology and Atmospheric Physics, Volume 95, January 2007)

  • Lin Zhen-Shan, Sun Xian

Nature of observed temperature changes across the United States during the 20th century (PDF) (Climate Research, Volume 17, Number 1, pp. 45–53, July 2001)

  • Paul C. Knappenberger, Patrick J. Michaels, Robert E. Davis

Natural signals in the MSU lower tropospheric temperature record (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 27, Number 18, pp. 2905–2908, September 2000)

  • Patrick J. Michaels, Paul C. Knappenberger

New Little Ice Age Instead of Global Warming? (Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Numbers 2-3, pp. 327-350, May 2003)

  • Landscheidt T.

Observed warming in cold anticyclones (PDF) (Climate Research, Volume 14, Number 1, pp. 1–6, January 2000)

  • Patrick J. Michaels, Paul C. Knappenberger, Robert C. Balling Jr, Robert E. Davis

Ocean heat content and Earth’s radiation imbalance (Physics Letters A, Volume 373, Issue 36, pp. 3296-3300, August 2009)

  • David H. Douglassa, Robert S. Knox

Oceanic influences on recent continental warming (PDF) (Climate Dynamics, Volume 32, Numbers 2-3, pp. 333-342, February 2009)

  • G.P. Compo, P.D. Sardeshmukh

On a possibility of estimating the feedback sign of the Earth climate system (PDF) (Proceedings of the Estonian Academy of Sciences: Engineering, Volume 13, Number 3, pp. 260-268, September 2007)

  • Olavi Kamer

On global forces of nature driving the Earth’s climate. Are humans involved? (PDF) (Environmental Geology, Volume 50, Number 6, August 2006)

  • L. F. Khilyuk, G. V. Chilingar

On nonstationarity and antipersistency in global temperature series (PDF) (Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 107, Issue D20, October 2002)

  • Olavi Kamer

On the credibility of climate predictions (PDF) (Hydrological Sciences Journal, Volume 53, Number 4, pp. 671-684, August 2008)

  • D. Koutsoyiannis, A. Efstratiadis, N. Mamassis, and A. Christofides

On the determination of climate feedbacks from ERBE data (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 36, Issue 16, August 2009)

  • Richard S. Lindzen, Yong-Sang Choi

On the sensitivity of the atmosphere to the doubling of the carbon dioxide concentration and on water vapour feedback (Energy & Environment, Volume 17, Number 4, pp. 603-607, July 2006)

  • Jack Barrett, David Bellamy, Heinz Hug

Overlooked scientific issues in assessing hypothesized greenhouse gas warming (PDF) (Environmental Software, Volume 6, Number 2, pp. 100-107, 1991)

  • Roger A. Pielke Sr.

Potential Biases in Feedback Diagnosis from Observational Data: A Simple Model Demonstration (PDF) (Journal of Climate, Volume 21, Issue 21, November 2008)

  • Roy W. Spencer, William D. Braswell

Potential Consequences of Increasing Atmospheric CO2 Concentration Compared to Other Environmental Problems (PDF) (Technology, Volume 7S, pp. 189-213, 2000)

  • Indur M. Goklany

Potential Dependence of Global Warming on the Residence Time (RT) in the Atmosphere of Anthropogenically Sourced Carbon Dioxide (Energy Fuels, Volume 23, Number 5, pp 2773–2784, April 2009)

  • Robert H. Essenhigh

Problems in evaluating regional and local trends in temperature: an example from eastern Colorado, USA (PDF) (International Journal of Climatology, Volume 22, Issue 4, pp. 421-434, April 2002)

Phanerozoic Climatic Zones and Paleogeography with a Consideration of Atmospheric CO2 Levels (Paleontological Journal, Volume 2, pp. 3-11, February 2003)

  • A. J. Boucot, Chen Xu, C. R. Scotese

Proxy climatic and environmental changes of the past 1000 years (PDF) (Climate Research, Volume 23, Number 2, pp. 89–110, January 2003)

  • Willie H. Soon, Sallie L. Baliunas

Quantifying the influence of anthropogenic surface processes and inhomogeneities on gridded global climate data (PDF) (Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 112, Issue D24, December 2007)

  • Ross R. McKitrick, Patrick J. Michaels

Rate and Magnitude of Past Global Climate Changes (PDF) (Environmental Geosciences, Volume 6, Number 2, pp. 63-75, June 1999)

  • John P. Bluemle, Joseph M. Sabel, Wibjörn Karlén

Rate of Increasing Concentrations of Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Controlled by Natural Temperature Variations (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 19, Number 7, pp. 995-1011, December 2008)

  • Fred Goldberg

Recent Changes in the Climate: Natural or Forced by Human Activity (Ambio, Volume 37, Number sp14, pp. 483–488, November 2008)

  • Wibjörn Karlén

Recent climate observations disagreement with projections (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 4, pp. 595-596, August 2009)

  • David R. B. Stockwell

Recent Global Warming: An Artifact of a Too-Short Temperature Record? (PDF) (Ambio, Volume 34, Number 3, pp. 263–264, May 2005)

  • Wibjörn Karlén

Review and impacts of climate change uncertainties (Futures, Volume 25, Number 8, pp. 850-863, 1993)

  • M.E. Fernau, W.J. Makofske, D.W. South

Revised 21st century temperature projections (PDF) (Climate Research, Volume 23, Number 1, pp. 1–9, 2002)

  • Patrick J. Michaels, Paul C. Knappenberger, Oliver W. Frauenfeld, Robert E. Davis

Science, Equity, and the War against Carbon (Science, Technology & Human Values, Volume 28, Number 1, pp. 69-92, 2003)

  • Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen

Scientific Consensus on Climate Change? (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 19, Number 2, pp. 281-286, March 2008)

  • Klaus-Martin Schulte

Seductive Simulations? Uncertainty Distribution Around Climate Models (PDF) (Social Studies of Science, Volume 35, Number 6, pp. 895-922, December 2005)

  • Myanna Lahsen

Some Coolness Concerning Global Warming (PDF) (Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 71, Issue 3, pp. 288–299, March 1990)

  • Richard S. Lindzen

Some examples of negative feedback in the Earth climate system (PDF) (Central European Journal of Physics, Volume 3, Number 2, June 2005)

  • Olavi Kärner

Sources and Sinks of Carbon Dioxide (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Numbers 1-2 , pp. 105-121, January 2009)

  • Tom Quirk

Statistical analysis does not support a human influence on climate (Energy & Environment, Volume 13, Number 3, pp. 329-331, July 2002)

  • S. Fred Singer

Surface Temperature Variations in East Africa and Possible Causes (Journal of Climate, Volume 22, Issue 12, pp. 3342–335, June 2009)

  • John R. Christy, William B. Norris, Richard T. McNider

Taking GreenHouse Warming Seriously (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Numbers 7-8, pp. 937-950, December 2007)

  • Richard S. Lindzen

Temperature trends in the lower atmosphere (Energy & Environment, Volume 17, Number 5, pp. 707-714, September 2006)

  • Vincent Gray

Temporal Variability in Local Air Temperature Series Shows Negative Feedback (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Numbers 7-8, pp. 1059-1072, December 2007)

  • Olavi Kärner

Test for harmful collinearity among predictor variables used in modeling global temperature (PDF) (Climate Research, Volume 24, Number 1, pp. 15-18, June 2003)

  • David H. Douglass, B. David Clader, John R. Christy, Patrick J. Michaels, David A. Belsley

The carbon dioxide thermometer and the cause of global warming (Energy & Environment, Volume 10, Number 1, pp. 1-18, January 1999)

  • N. Calder

The cause of global warming (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 11, Number 6, pp. 613-629, November 2000)

  • Vincent Gray

The continuing search for an anthropogenic climate change signal: Limitations of correlation-based approaches (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 24, Number 18, pp. 2319–2322, 1997)

  • David R. Legates, Robert E. Davis

The Double Standard in Environmental Science (PDF) (Regulation, Volume 30, Number 2, pp.16-22, 2007)

  • Stanley W. Trimble

The Fraud Allegation Against Some Climatic Research of Wei-Chyung Wang (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Numbers 7-8, pp. 985-995, December 2007)

  • Douglas J. Keenan

The Global Warming Debate: A Review of the State of Science (PDF) (Pure and Applied Geophysics, Volume 162, Issue 8-9, pp. 1557-1586, August 2005) Madhav L. Khandekar, TS Murty, P Chittibabu

The greenhouse effect and global change: review and reappraisal (International Journal of Environmental Studies, Volume 36, Numbers 1-2, pp. 55-71, July 1990)

  • Patrick J. Michaels

The “Greenhouse Effect” as a Function of Atmospheric Mass (Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Numbers 2-3, pp. 351-356, May 2003)

  • Hans Jelbring

The Interaction of Climate Change and the Carbon Dioxide Cycle (Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 2, pp. 217-238, March 2005)

  • Arthur Rörsch, Richard S. Courtney, Dick Thoenes

The Letter Science Magazine Rejected (Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Numbers 3-4, pp. 685-688, July 2005)

  • Benny Peiser

The roles of carbon dioxide and water vapour in warming and cooling the earth’s troposphere (Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and Biomolecular Spectroscopy, Volume 51, Issue 3, Pages 415-417, March 1995)

  • Jack Barrett

The value of climate forecasting (Surveys in Geophysics, Volume 7, Number 3, June 1985)

  • Garth W. Paltridge

The Way of Warming (PDF) (Regulation, Volume 23, Number 3, 2000)

  • Patrick J. Michaels

“The Wernerian syndrome”; aspects of global climate change; an analysis of assumptions, data, and conclusions (Environmental Geosciences, Volume 3, Number 4, pp. 204-210, December 1996)

  • Lee C. Gerhard

Trend Analysis of RSS and UAH MSU Global Temperature Data (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 7, pp. 1087-1098, October 2009)

  • Craig Loehle

Trends in middle- and upper-level tropospheric humidity from NCEP reanalysis data (PDF) (Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 98, Numbers 3-4, pp. 351-359, February 2009)

  • Garth Paltridge, Albert Arking, Michael Pook

Tropospheric temperature change since 1979 from tropical radiosonde and satellite measurements (Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 112, Issue D6, March 2007)

  • John R. Christy, William B. Norris, Roy W. Spencer, Justin J. Hnilo

Uncertainties in assessing global warming during the 20th century: disagreement between key data sources (Energy & Environment, Volume 17, Number 5, pp. 685-706, September 2006)

  • Maxim Ogurtsov, Markus Lindholm

Unresolved issues with the assessment of multidecadal global land surface temperature trends (PDF) (Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 112, Issue D24, December 2007)

Useless Arithmetic: Ten Points to Ponder When Using Mathematical Models in Environmental Decision Making (PDF) (Public Administration Review, Volume 68, Issue 3, pp. 470-479, March 2008)

  • Linda Pilkey-Jarvis, Orrin H. Pilkey

Validity of climate change forecasting for public policy decision making (PDF) (International Journal of Forecasting, doi:10.1016, May 2009)

  • Kesten C. Green, J. Scott Armstrong, Willie Soon

What may we conclude about global tropospheric temperature trends? (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Issue 6, March 2004)

  • John R. Christy, William B. Norris

When Was The Hottest Summer? A State Climatologist Struggles for an Answer (Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 83, Issue 5, pp. 723-734, May 2002)

  • John R. Christy

An Inconvenient Truth:

An Inconvenient Truth : a focus on its portrayal of the hydrologic cycle (GeoJournal, Volume 70, Number 1, pp. 15-19, September 2007)

  • David R. Legates

An Inconvenient Truth : blurring the lines between science and science fiction (GeoJournal, Volume 70, Number 1, pp. 11-14, September 2007)

  • Roy W. Spencer

Antarctica: A doubling in snow accumulation in the western Antarctic Peninsula since 1850 (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 35, Issue 1, January 2008)

  • Elizabeth R. Thomas, Gareth J. Marshall, Joseph R. McConnell

Active volcanism beneath the West Antarctic ice sheet and implications for ice-sheet stability (Nature, Volume 361, Number 6412, p. 526-529, February 1993)

  • Donald D. Blankenship et al.

An updated Antarctic melt record through 2009 and its linkages to high-latitude and tropical climate variability (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 36, Issue 18, September 2009)

  • Marco Tedesco, Andrew J. Monaghan

Antarctic climate cooling and terrestrial ecosystem response (Nature, Volume 415, Number 6871, pp. 517-520, January 2002)

  • Peter T. Doran et al.

First survey of Antarctic sub–ice shelf sediments reveals mid-Holocene ice shelf retreat (Geology, Volume 29, Number 9, pp. 787-790, September 2001)

  • Carol J. Pudsey, Jeffrey Evans

Orbitally induced oscillations in the East Antarctic ice sheet at the Oligocene/Miocene boundary (Nature, Volume 413, Number 6857, pp. 719-723 , October 2001)

  • Tim R. Naish et al.

Past and Future Grounding-Line Retreat of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (Science, Volume 286. Number 5438, pp. 280-283, October 1999)

  • H. Conway, B. L. Hall, G. H. Denton, A. M. Gades, E. D. Waddington

Snowfall-Driven Growth in East Antarctic Ice Sheet Mitigates Recent Sea-Level Rise (Science, Volume 308, Number 5730, pp. 1898-1901, June 2005)

  • Curt H. Davis, Yonghong Li, Joseph R. McConnell, Markus M. Frey, Edward Hanna

Arctic: Actual and insolation-weighted Northern Hemisphere snow cover and sea-ice between 1973–2002 (Climate Dynamics, Volume 22, Issue 6-7, pp. 591-595, June 2004)

  • Roger A. Pielke Sr., G. Liston, W. Chapman, D. Robinson

Accounts from 19th-century Canadian Arctic Explorers’ Logs Reflect Present Climate Conditions (Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union, Volume 84, Issue 40, pp. 410-412, 2003)

  • James E. Overland, Kevin Wood

Arctic sea ice thickness remained constant during the 1990s (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 28, Issue 6, pp. 1039-1042, March 2001)

  • P. Winsor

Has Arctic Sea Ice Rapidly Thinned? (PDF) (Journal of Climate, Volume 15, Issue 13, pp.1691-1701, July 2002)

  • Greg Holloway,Tessa Sou

Historical variability of sea ice edge position in the Nordic Seas (Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 111, Issue C1, January 2006)

  • Dmitry V. Divine, Chad Dick

Holocene fluctuations in Arctic sea-ice cover: dinocyst-based reconstructions for the eastern Chukchi Sea (Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, Volume 45, Number 11, pp. 1377-1397, November 2008)

  • J.L. McKay et al.

Sea-ice decline due to more than warming alone (Nature, Volume 450, Issue 7166, pp. 27, November 2007)

  • Julia Slingo, Rowan Sutton

Solar Arctic-Mediated Climate Variation on Multidecadal to Centennial Timescales: Empirical Evidence, Mechanistic Explanation, and Testable Consequences (PDF) (Physical Geography, Volume 30, Number 2, March-April 2009)

  • Willie H. Soon

Variable solar irradiance as a plausible agent for multidecadal variations in the Arctic-wide surface air temperature record of the past 130 years (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Issue 16, August 2005)

  • Willie H. Soon

Variations in the age of Arctic sea-ice and summer sea-ice extent (Geophyscial Research Letters, Volume 31, Issue 9, May 2004)

  • Ignatius G. Rigor, John M. Wallace

Clouds:

Cloud and radiation budget changes associated with tropical intraseasonal oscillations (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 34, Issue 15, August 2007)

  • Roy W. Spencer, William D. Braswell, John R. Christy, Justin Hnilo

Does the Earth Have an Adaptive Infrared Iris? (PDF) (Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 82, Issue 3, pp. 417-432, March 2001)

Radiative effect of cirrus with different optical properties over the tropics in MODIS and CERES observations (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Issue 21, November 2006)

  • Yong-Sang Choi, Chang-Hoi Ho

Validation of the cloud property retrievals from the MTSAT-1R imagery using MODIS observations (PDF) (International Journal of Remote Sensing, 2009)

  • Yong-Sang Choi, Chang-Hoi Ho
CO2 lags Temperature changes:

Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Concentration Across the Mid-Pleistocene Transition (Science, Volume 324, Number 5934, pp. 1551-1554, June 2009)

  • Bärbel Hönisch, N. Gary Hemming, David Archer, Mark Siddall, Jerry F. McManus
"The lack of a gradual decrease in interglacial PCO2 does not support the suggestion that a long-term drawdown of atmospheric CO2 was the main cause of the climate transition."
Atmospheric CO2 Concentration from 60 to 20 kyr BP from the Taylor Dome ice core, Antarctica (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 27, Issue 5, March 2000) - Andreas Inderm¨uhle, Eric Monnin, Bernhard Stauer, Thomas F. Stocker
"The lag was calculated for which the correlation coefficient of the CO2 record and the corresponding temperatures values reached a maximum. The simulation yields a lag of (1200 ± 700) yr."
Atmospheric CO2 Concentrations over the Last Glacial Termination (Science, Volume 291. Number 5501, January 2001) - Eric Monnin, Andreas Indermühle, André Dällenbach, Jacqueline Flückiger, Bernhard Stauffer, Thomas F. Stocker, Dominique Raynaud, Jean-Marc Barnola
"The start of the CO2 increase thus lagged the start of the [temperature] increase by 800 ± 600 years."
Ice core records of atmospheric CO2 around the last three glacial terminations (Science, Volume 283, Number 5408, pp. 1712-1714, March 1999) - Hubertus Fischer, Martin Wahlen, Jesse Smith, Derek Mastroianni, Bruce Deck
"High-resolution records from Antarctic ice cores show that carbon dioxide concentrations increased by 80 to 100 parts per million by volume 600 ± 400 years after the warming of the last three deglaciations."
Southern Hemisphere and Deep-Sea Warming Led Deglacial Atmospheric CO2 Rise and Tropical Warming (Science, Volume 318, Issue 5849, September 2007) - Lowell Stott, Axel Timmermann, Robert Thunell
"Deep sea temperatures warmed by ~2C between 19 and 17 ka B.P. (thousand years before present), leading the rise in atmospheric CO2 and tropical surface ocean warming by ~1000 years."
The phase relations among atmospheric CO2 content, temperature and global ice volume over the past 420 ka (PDF) (Quaternary Science Reviews, Volume 20, Issue 4, pp. 583-589, February 2001) - Manfred Mudelsee
"Over the full 420 ka of the Vostok record, CO2 variations lag behind atmospheric temperature changes in the Southern Hemisphere by 1.3±1.0 ka"
Timing of Atmospheric CO2 and Antarctic Temperature Changes Across Termination III (Science, Volume 299, Number 5613, March 2003) - Nicolas Caillon, Jeffrey P. Severinghaus, Jean Jouzel, Jean-Marc Barnola, Jiancheng Kang, Volodya Y. Lipenkov
"The sequence of events during Termination III suggests that the CO2 increase lagged Antarctic deglacial warming by 800 ± 200 years and preceded the Northern Hemisphere deglaciation."
Coral Reefs:

A critique of a method to determine long-term decline of coral reef ecosystems (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 6, pp. 783-796, November 2007)

  • Peter V. Ridd

Bikini Atoll coral biodiversity resilience five decades after nuclear testing (PDF) (Marine Pollution Bulletin, Volume 56, Issue 3, pp. 503-515, March 2008)

  • Zoe T. Richardsa, Maria Begerd, Silvia Pincae, Carden C. Wallace

Coral reef calcification and climate change: The effect of ocean warming (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Number 22, November 2004)

Reef corals bleach to survive change (Nature, Volume 411, Issue 6839, pp. 765-766, June 2001)

  • Andrew C. Baker
Deaths: Changing Heat-Related Mortality in the United States (PDF) (Environmental Health Perspectives, Volume 111, Number 14, pp. 1712-1718, November 2003) - Robert E. Davis, Paul C. Knappenberger, Patrick J. Michaels, Wendy M. Novicoff

Cold—an underrated risk factor for health (Environmental Research, Volume 92, Issue 1, pp. 8-13, May 2003)

  • James B. Mercer

Decadal changes in heat-related human mortality in the eastern United States (PDF) (Climate Research, Volume 22, Number 2, pp. 175-184. September 2002)

  • Robert E. Davis, Paul C. Knappenberger, Wendy M. Novicoff, Patrick J. Michaels

Global Health Threats: Global Warming in Perspective (PDF) (Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons, Volume 14, Number 3, pp. 69-75, 2009)

  • Indur M. Goklany

Heat related mortality in warm and cold regions of Europe: observational study (British Medical Journal, Volume 321, Number 7262, pp. 670-673, September 2000)

  • W. R. Keatinge et al.

Seasonality of climate–human mortality relationships in US cities and impacts of climate change (PDF) (Climate Research, Volume 26, Number 1, pp. 61-76, April 2004)

  • Robert E. Davis, Paul C. Knappenberger, Patrick J. Michaels, Wendy M. Novicoff

Temperature-related mortality in France, a comparison between regions with different climates from the perspective of global warming (International Journal of Biometeorology, Volume 51, Number 2, November 2006)

  • Mohamed Laaidi, Karine Laaidi, Jean-Pierre Besancenot

U.S. Trends in Crude Death Rates Due to Extreme Heat and Cold Ascribed to Weather, 1979-97 (Technology, Volume 7S, pp. 165-173, 2000)

  • Indur M. Goklany, Sorin R. Straja

Was the 2003 European summer heat wave unusual in a global context? (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Issue 23, December 2006)

  • Thomas N. Chase, Klaus Wolter, Roger A. Pielke Sr., Ichtiaque Rasool

Floods:

Claim of Largest Flood on Record Proves False (Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union, Volume 84, Number 12, pp. 109-109, 2003)

  • N. A. Sheffer et al.

Floods, droughts and climate change (South African Journal of Science, Volume 91, Number 8, pp. 403-408, August 1995)

  • W.J.R. Alexander

Human Factors Explain the Increased Losses from Weather and Climate Extremes (PDF) (Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 81, Issue 3, pp.437-442, March 2000)

  • Stanley A. Changnon, Roger A. Pielke Jr., David Changnon, Richard T. Sylves, Roger Pulwarty

Nine Fallacies of Floods (PDF) (Climatic Change, Volume 42, Number 2, June 1999)

  • Roger A. Pielke Jr.

No upward trends in the occurrence of extreme floods in central Europe (Nature, Volume 425, Issue 6954, pp. 166-169, September 2003)

  • Manfred Mudelsee, Michael Börngen, Gerd Tetzlaff, Uwe Grünewald

Palaeoclimatic and archaeological evidence for a 200-yr recurrence of floods and droughts linking California, Mesoamerica and South America over the past 2000 years (Holocene, Volume 13, Number 5, pp. 763-778, 2003)

  • Amdt Schimmelmann, Carina B. Lange, Betty J. Meggers

Glaciers:

Kilimanjaro Glaciers: Recent areal extent from satellite data and new interpretation of observed 20th century retreat rates (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Issue 16, August 2006)

  • Nicolas J. Cullen et al.

Modern Glacier Retreat on Kilimanjaro as Evidence of Climate Change: Observations and Fact (PDF) (International journal of climatology, Volume 24, Number 3, pp. 329-339, March 2004)

  • Georg Kaser et al.

Recent glacier advances in Norway and New Zealand: A comparison of their glaciological and meteorological causes (Geografiska Annaler: Series A, Physical Geography, Volume 87, Issue 1, pp. 141-157, March 2005)

  • T. Chinn et al.

The Shrinking Glaciers of Kilimanjaro: Can Global Warming Be Blamed? (American Scientist, Volume 95, Number 4, pp. 318-325, July 2007)

  • PW Mote, G Kaser

Very high-elevation Mont Blanc glaciated areas not affected by the 20th century climate change (Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 112, Issue D9, May 2007)

  • C. Vincent, E. Le Meur, D. Six, M. Funk, M. Hoelzle, S. Preunkert

Greenland:

Global Warming and the Greenland Ice Sheet (PDF) (Climatic Change, Volume 63, Numbers 1-2, pp. 201-221, March 2004)

  • Petr Chylek, Jason E. Box, Glen Lesins

Greenland warming of 1920–1930 and 1995–2005 (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Issue 11, June 2006)

  • Petr Chylek, M. K. Dubey, G. Lesins

Rapid Changes in Ice Discharge from Greenland Outlet Glaciers (Science, Volume 315, Number 5818, pp. 1559-1561, March 2007)

  • Ian M. Howat, Ian Joughin, Ted A. Scambos

Recent cooling in coastal southern Greenland and relation with the North Atlantic Oscillation (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 30, Issue 3, pp. 32-1, February 2003)

  • Edward Hanna, John Cappelen

Recent Ice-Sheet Growth in the Interior of Greenland (Science, Volume 310, Number 5750, pp. 1013-1016, November 2005)

  • Ola M. Johannessen, Kirill Khvorostovsky, Martin W. Miles, Leonid P. Bobylev

Gulf Stream:

Gulf Stream safe if wind blows and Earth turns (Nature, Volume 428, Issue 6983, April 2004)

  • Carl Wunsch

Hockey Stick: (MBH98)

Corrections to the Mann et al (1998) Proxy Data Base and Northern Hemisphere Average Temperature Series (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Number 6, pp. 751-771, November 2003)

  • Stephen McIntyre, Ross McKitrick

The M&M Critique of the MBH98 Northern Hemisphere Climate Index: Update and Implications (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 1, pp. 69-100, January 2005)

  • Stephen McIntyre, Ross McKitrick

Hockey sticks, principal components, and spurious significance (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Issue 3, February 2005)

  • Stephen McIntyre, Ross McKitrick
"Their method, when tested on persistent red noise, nearly always produces a hockey stick shape"
- Reply to comment by Huybers on "Hockey sticks, principal components, and spurious significance" (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, October 2005) - Stephen McIntyre, Ross McKitrick

Highly variable Northern Hemisphere temperatures reconstructed from low- and high-resolution proxy data (PDF) (Nature, Volume 433, Issue 7026, pp. 613-617, February 2005)

  • Anders Moberg, Dmitry M. Sonechkin, Karin Holmgren, Nina M. Datsenko and Wibjörn Karlén

Comment on “The Spatial Extent of 20th-Century Warmth in the Context of the Past 1200 Years” (Science, Volume 316, Number 5833, pp. 1844, June 2007)

  • Gerd Bürger

Bias and Concealment in the IPCC Process: The “Hockey-Stick” Affair and Its Implications (Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Numbers 7-8, pp. 951-983, December 2007)

  • David Holland

A mathematical analysis of the divergence problem in dendroclimatology (PDF) (Climatic Change, Volume 94, Numbers 3-4, pp. 233-245, June 2008)

  • C. Loehle

Proxy inconsistency and other problems in millennial paleoclimate reconstructions (PDF) (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 106, Number 6, February 2009)

  • Stephen McIntyre, Ross McKitrick

Hurricanes:

Are there trends in hurricane destruction? (PDF) (Nature, Volume 438, Number 7071, pp. E11, December 2005)

  • Roger A. Pielke Jr.

Can We Detect Trends in Extreme Tropical Cyclones? (PDF) (Science, Volume 313, Number 5786, pp. 452-454, July 2006)

  • Christopher W. Landsea, Bruce A. Harper, Karl Hoarau, John A. Knaff

Causes of the Unusually Destructive 2004 Atlantic Basin Hurricane Season (PDF) (Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 87, Issue 10, October 2006)

  • Philip J. Klotzbach, William M. Gray

Comments on “Impacts of CO2-Induced Warming on Simulated Hurricane Intensity and Precipitation: Sensitivity to the Choice of Climate Model and Convective Scheme” (Journal of Climate, Volume 18, Issue 23, December 2005)

  • Patrick J. Michaels, Paul C. Knappenberger, Christopher Landsea

Counting Atlantic Tropical Cyclones Back to 1900 (PDF) (Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union, Volume 88, Number 18, pp. 197, May 2007)

  • Christopher W. Landsea

Hurricanes and Global Warming (PDF) (Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 86, Issue 11, November 2005)

Hurricanes and Global Warming (PDF) (Nature, Volume 438, Number 7071, pp. E11-E12, December 2005)

  • Christopher W. Landsea

Landscape and Regional Impacts of Hurricanes in New England (Ecological Monographs, Volume 71, Number 1, pp. 27-48, February 2001)

  • Emery R. Boose, Kristen E. Chamberlin, David R. Foster

Normalized Hurricane Damages in the United States: 1925–95 (PDF) (Weather and Forecasting, Volume 13, Issue 3, September 1998)

  • Roger A. Pielke Jr., Christopher W. Landsea

Normalized Hurricane Damage in the United States: 1900–2005 (PDF) (Natural Hazards, Volume 9, Issue 1, pp. 29-42, February 2008)

  • Roger A. Pielke Jr., Joel Gratz, Christopher W. Landsea, Douglas Collins, Mark A. Saunders, Rade Musulin6

Sea-surface temperatures and tropical cyclones in the Atlantic basin (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Issue 9, May 2006)

  • Patrick J. Michaels, Paul C. Knappenberger, Robert E. Davis

Simulated reduction in Atlantic hurricane frequency under twenty-first-century warming conditions (Nature Geoscience, Volume 1, Number 6, pp. 359-364, June 2008)

  • Thomas R. Knutson et al.

Trends in global tropical cyclone activity over the past twenty years (1986–2005) (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Issue 11, May 2006)

  • Philip J. Klotzbach

Tropical Cyclones and Global Climate Change: A Post-IPCC Assessment (PDF) (Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 79, Issue 1, January 1998)

  • A. Henderson-Sellers, H. Zhang, G. Berz, K. Emanuel, W. Gray, C. Landsea, G. Holland, J. Lighthill, S.-L. Shieh, P. Webster, K. McGuffie

Malaria:

Climate Change and Mosquito-Borne Disease (PDF) (Environmental Health Perspectives, Volume 109, Supplement 1, March 2001)

  • Paul Reiter

From Shakespeare to Defoe: Malaria in England in the Little Ice Age (PDF) (Emerging Infectious Diseases, Volume 6, Number 1, January–February 2000)

  • Paul Reiter

Global warming and malaria: a call for accuracy (Lancet Infectious Diseases, Volume 4, Issue 6, pp. 323-324, June 2004)

  • Paul Reiter, C. Thomas, P. Atkinson, S. Hay, S. Randolph, D. Rogers, G. Shanks, R. Snow, A. Spielman

Global warming and malaria: knowing the horse before hitching the cart (Malaria Journal, Volume 7, Supplement 1, December 2008)

  • Paul Reiter

Malaria and Global Warming in Perspective? (PDF) (Emerging Infectious Diseases, Volume 6, Number 4, pp. 438-9. July-August 2000)

  • Paul Reiter

Medieval Warming Period - Little Ice Age:

A 700 year record of Southern Hemisphere extratropical climate variability (Annals of Glaciology, Volume 39, Number 1, pp.127-132, June 2004)

  • P.A Mayewski et al.

Caribbean sea surface temperatures: Two‐to‐three degrees cooler than present during the Little Ice Age (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 27, Issue 20, pp. 3365-3368, Octonber 2000)

  • Amos Winter, Hiroshi Ishioroshi, Tsuyoshi Watanabe, Tadamichi Oba, John R. Christy

Coherent High- and Low-Latitude Climate Variability During the Holocene Warm Period (Science, Volume 288, Number 5474, pp. 2198-2202, June 2000)

  • Peter deMenocal, Joseph Ortiz, Tom Guilderson, Michael Sarnthein

Evidence for a ‘Medieval Warm Period’ in a 1,100 year tree-ring reconstruction of past austral summer temperatures in New Zealand (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 29, Number 14, pp. 1-4, July 2002)

  • E. R. Cook, J. G. Palmer, R. D’Arrigo

Evidence for a warmer period during the 12th and 13th centuries AD from chironomid assemblages in Southampton Island, Nunavut, Canada (Quaternary Research, Volume 72, Issue 1, pp. 27-37, July 2009)

  • Nicolas Rolland et al.

Evidence for the existence of the medieval warm period in China (Climatic Change, Volume 26, Numbers 2-3, pp. 289-297, March 1994)

Late Holocene surface ocean conditions of the Norwegian Sea (Vøring Plateau) (Paleoceanography, Volume 18, Number 2, June 2003)

  • Carin Andersson, Bjørg Risebrobakken, Eystein Jansen, Svein Olaf Dahl

Low-Frequency Signals in Long Tree-Ring Chronologies for Reconstructing Past Temperature Variability (Science, Volume 295, Number 5563, pp. 2250-2253, March 2002)

  • Jan Esper, Edward R. Cook, Fritz H. Schweingruber

Medieval climate warming and aridity as indicated by multiproxy evidence from the Kola Peninsula, Russia (Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, Volume 209, Issues 1-4, pp. 113-125, July 2004)

  • K. V. Kremenetski, T. Boettger, G. M. MacDonald, T. Vaschalova, L. Sulerzhitsky, A. Hiller

Medieval Warm Period, Little Ice Age and 20th century temperature variability from Chesapeake Bay (Global and Planetary Change, Volume 36, Issues 1-2, pp. 17-29, March 2003)

  • T. M. Cronin, G. S. Dwyer, T. Kamiya, S. Schwede, D. A. Willard

Reconstructing Climatic and Environmental Changes of the Past 1000 Years: A Reappraisal (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Numbers 2-3, pp. 233-296, May 2003)

  • Willie H. Soon, Sallie L. Baliunas, Sherwood B. Idso, Craig Idso, David R. Legates
"Many records reveal that the 20th century is likely not the warmest nor a uniquely extreme climatic period of the last millennium."
The Little Ice Age and Medieval Warm Period in the Sargasso Sea (Science, Volume 274, Number 5292, pp. 1503-1508, November 29, 1996) - Lloyd D. Keigwin

The Little Ice Age and Medieval Warming in South Africa (South African Journal of Science, Volume 96, Number 3, pp. 121-126, 2000)

  • P. D. Tyson, W. Karlén, K. Holmgren and G. A. Heiss

The Little Ice Age as Recorded in the Stratigraphy of the Tropical Quelccaya Ice Cap (Science, Volume 234, Number 4774, pp. 361-364, October 1986)

  • L.G. Thompson, E. Mosley-Thompson, W. Dansgaard, P.M. Grootes

The ‘Mediaeval Warm Period’ drought recorded in Lake Huguangyan, tropical South China (Holocene, Volume 12, Number 5, pp. 511-516, 2002)

  • Guoqiang Chu, Jiaqi Liu, Qing Sun, Houyuan Lu, Zhaoyan Gu, Wenyuan Wang, Tungsheng Liu

The Medieval Warm Period in the Daihai Area (Journal of Lake Sciences, Volume 14, Number 3, pp. 209-216, September 2002)

  • Z. Jin, J. Shen, S. Wang, E. Zhang

Time scales and trends in the central England temperature data (1659–1990): A wavelet analysis (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 24, Issue 11, pp. 1351-1354, June 1997)

  • Sallie Baliunas, Peter Frick, Dmitry Sokoloff, Willie Soon

Torneträsk tree-ring width and density ad 500–2004: a test of climatic sensitivity and a new 1500-year reconstruction of north Fennoscandian summers (Climate Dynamics, Volume 31, Numbers 7-8, December 2008)

  • Håkan Grudd

Tree-ring and glacial evidence for the medieval warm epoch and the little ice age in southern South America (Climatic Change, Volume 26, Numbers 2-3, March 1994)

  • Ricardo Villalba

Was the Medieval Warm Period Global? (PDF) (Science, Volume 291, Number 5508, pp. 1497-1499, February 2001)

  • Wallace S. Broecker
"The Little Ice Age and the subsequent warming were global in extent. Several Holocene fluctuations in snowline, comparable in magnitude to that of the post-Little Ice Age warming, occurred in the Swiss Alps. Borehole records both in polar ice and in wells from all continents suggest the existence of a Medieval Warm Period. Finally, two multidecade-duration droughts plagued the western United States during the latter part of the Medieval Warm Period. I consider this evidence sufficiently convincing to merit an intensification of studies aimed at elucidating Holocene climate fluctuations, upon which the warming due to greenhouse gases is superimposed."
Ocean Acidification:

Elevated water temperature and carbon dioxide concentration increase the growth of a keystone echinoderm (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 106, Issue 23, pp. 9316-9321, June 2009)

  • Rebecca A. Gooding, Christopher D. G. Harley, Emily Tang

Modern-age buildup of CO2 and its effects on seawater acidity and salinity (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Number 10, May 2006)

  • Hugo A. Loáiciga
"This paper's results concerning average seawater salinity and acidity show that, on a global scale and over the time scales considered (hundreds of years), there would not be accentuated changes in either seawater salinity or acidity from the observed or hypothesized rises in atmospheric CO2 concentrations."
Phytoplankton Calcification in a High-CO2 World (Science, Volume 320, Number 5874, pp. 336-340, April 2008) - M. Debora Iglesias-Rodriguez et al.

Permafrost: Ancient Permafrost and a Future, Warmer Arctic (Science, Volume 321, Number 5896, pp. 1648, September 2008)

  • Duane G. Froese, John A. Westgate, Alberto V. Reyes, Randolph J. Enkin, Shari J. Preece
"We report the presence of relict ground ice in subarctic Canada that is greater than 700,000 years old, with the implication that ground ice in this area has survived past interglaciations that were warmer and of longer duration than the present interglaciation."
Near-surface permafrost degradation: How severe during the 21st century? (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 34, Issue 9, May 2007) - G. Delisle
"Based on paleoclimatic data and in consequence of this study, it is suggested that scenarios calling for massive release of methane in the near future from degrading permafrost are questionable."
Polar Bears:

Polar bears of western Hudson Bay and climate change: Are warming spring air temperatures the “ultimate” survival control factor? (PDF) (Ecological Complexity, Volume 4, Issue 3, pp. 73-84, September 2007)

Polar Bear Population Forecasts: A Public-Policy Forecasting Audit (PDF) (Interfaces, Volume 75, April 2008)

  • J. Scott Armstrong, Kesten C. Green, Willie H. Soon

Sea Level: Estimating future sea level changes from past records (PDF) (Global and Planetary Change, Volume 40, Issues 1-2, pp. 49-54, January 2004)

Geocentric sea-level trend estimates from GPS analyses at relevant tide gauges world-wide (PDF) (Global and Planetary Change, Volume 57, Issues 3-4, pp. 396-406, June 2007)

  • G. Wöppelmann, B. Martin Miguez, M.-N. Bouin, Z. Altamimi

Global Warming and Sea Level Rise (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 7, pp. 1067-1074, 2009)

  • Madhav L. Khandekar

New perspectives for the future of the Maldives (PDF) (Global and Planetary Change, Volume 40, Issue 1-2, pp. 177-182, January 2004)

Snowfall-Driven Growth in East Antarctic Ice Sheet Mitigates Recent Sea-Level Rise (Science, Volume 308, Number 5730, pp. 1898-1901, June 2005)

  • Curt H. Davis, Yonghong Li, Joseph R. McConnell, Markus M. Frey, Edward Hanna)

Sea Level Changes and Tsunamis, Environmental Stress and Migration Overseas: The Case of the Maldives and Sri Lanka (PDF) (International Quarterly for Asian Studies, Volume 38, Number 3–4, pp. 353–374, November 2007)

  • Nils-Axel Mörner

The Maldives project: a future free from sea-level flooding (Contemporary South Asia, Volume 13, Number 2, pp. 149-155, June 2004)

  • Nils-Axel Mörner

Species Extinctions:

Dangers of crying wolf over risk of extinctions (Nature, Volume 428, Issue 6985, pp. 799, April 2004)

  • Richard J. Ladle, Paul Jepson, Miguel B. Araújo & Robert J. Whittaker

Riding the Wave: Reconciling the Roles of Disease and Climate Change in Amphibian Declines (PLoS Biology, Volume 6, Number 3, pp. 441-454, March 2008)

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Storms:

Changes in Global Monsoon Circulations Since 1950 (Natural Hazards, Volume 29, Number 2, pp. 229-254, June 2003)

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Changing storminess? An analysis of long-term sea level data sets (PDF) (Climate Research, Volume 11, Number 2, pp. 161-172, March 1999)

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Characteristics of long-duration precipitation events across the United States (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 34, Issue 22, November 2007)

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Climate change and extratropical storminess in the United States: An assessment? (Journal of the American Water Resources Association, Volume 35, Number 6, pp. 1387-1398, December 1999)

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Comment on WMO Statement on Extreme Weather Events (Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, Volume 84, Issue 41, pp. 428-428 , February 2003)

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Compilation and Discussion of Trends in Severe Storms in the United States: Popular Perception v. Climate Reality (Natural Hazards, Volume 29, Number 2, pp. 103-112, June 2003)

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Extreme Weather Trends Vs. Dangerous Climate Change: A Need for Critical Reassessment (Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 2, pp. 327-332, March 2005)

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Indian Monsoon Variability in a Global Warming Scenario (Natural Hazards, Volume 29, Number 2, pp. 189-206, June 2003)

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North American Trends in Extreme Precipitation (Natural Hazards, Volume 29, Number 2, pp. 291-305, June, 2003)

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Scandinavian storminess since about 1800 (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Issue 20, October 2004)

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Seasonal, interannual, and decadal variability of storm surges at Tauranga, New Zealand (New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research, Volume 34, Number 3, pp. 419-434, September 2000)

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Surges, atmospheric pressure and wind change and flooding probability on the Atlantic coast of France (Oceanologica Acta, Volume 23, Number 6, pp. 643-661, November 2000)

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Trends in precipitation on the wettest days of the year across the contiguous USA? (International Journal of Climatology, Volume 24, Number 15, pp. 1873-1882, December 2004)

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Twentieth-Century Storm Activity along the U.S. East Coast (PDF) (Journal of Climate, Volume 13, Issue 10, pp. 1748-1761, May 2000)

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Tornadoes:

Normalized Damage from Major Tornadoes in the United States: 1890–1999 (PDF) (Weather and Forecasting, Volume 16, Issue 1, pp. 168-176, February 2001)

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1,500-Year Climate Cycle:

A Pervasive Millennial-Scale Cycle in North Atlantic Holocene and Glacial Climates (Science, Volume 278, Number 5341, pp. 1257-1266, November 1997)

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A Variable Sun Paces Millennial Climate (Science, Volume 294, Number 5546, pp. 1431-1433, November 2001)

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Cyclic Variation and Solar Forcing of Holocene Climate in the Alaskan Subarctic (Science, Volume 301, Number 5641, pp. 1890-1893, September 2003)

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Decadal to millennial cyclicity in varves and turbidites from the Arabian Sea: hypothesis of tidal origin (Global and Planetary Change, Volume 34, Issues 3-4, pp. 313-325, November 2002)

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Late Holocene approximately 1500 yr climatic periodicities and their implications (Geology, Volume 26, Number 5, pp. 471-473, May 1998)

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Possible solar origin of the 1,470-year glacial climate cycle demonstrated in a coupled model (Nature, Volume 438, Issue 70695, pp. 208-211, November 2005)

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The 1,800-year oceanic tidal cycle: A possible cause of rapid climate change (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 97, Number 8, pp. 3814-3819, April 2000)

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The origin of the 1500-year climate cycles in Holocene North-Atlantic records (PDF) (Climate of the Past, Volume 3, Issue 2, pp.679-692, 2007)

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Timing of abrupt climate change: A precise clock (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 30, Issue 10, pp. 17-1, May 2003)

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Timing of Millennial-Scale Climate Change in Antarctica and Greenland During the Last Glacial Period (Science, Volume 291, Issue 5501, pp. 109-112, January 2001)

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Widespread evidence of 1500 yr climate variability in North America during the past 14 000 yr (Geology, Volume 30, Issue 5, pp. 455-458, May 2002)

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Cosmic Rays: Solar variability influences on weather and climate: Possible connections through cosmic ray fluxes and storm intensification (Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 94, Number D12, pp. 14783-14792, October 1989)

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Hale-cycle effects in cosmic-ray intensity during the last four cycles (Astrophysics and Space Science, Volume 246, Number 1, March 1996)

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Variation of Cosmic Ray Flux and Global Cloud Coverage - a Missing Link in Solar-Climate Relationships (PDF) (Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 59, Number 11, pp. 1225-1232, July 1997)

Influence of Cosmic Rays on Earth’s Climate (PDF) (Physical Review Letters, Volume 81, Issue 22, pp. 5027-5030, November 1998)

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Cosmic rays and Earth’s climate (PDF) (Space Science Reviews, Volume 93, Numbers 1-2, pp. 175-185, July 2000)

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Cosmic rays and climate: The influence of cosmic rays on terrestrial clouds and global warming (Astronomy & Geophysics, Volume 41, Issue 4, pp. 4.18-4.22, August 2000)

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Cosmic Rays, Clouds, and Climate (PDF) (Space Science Reviews, Volume 94, Numbers 1-2, pp. 215-230, November 2000)

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Low cloud properties influenced by cosmic rays (Physical Review Letters, Volume 85, Issue 23, pp. 5004-5007, December 2000)

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On the relationship of cosmic ray flux and precipitation (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 28, Number 8, pp. 1527–1530, April 2001)

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Altitude variations of cosmic ray induced production of aerosols: Implications for global cloudiness and climate (Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 107, Issue A7, pp. SIA 8-1, July 2002)

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Cosmic Ray Diffusion from the Galactic Spiral Arms, Iron Meteorites, and a Possible Climatic Connection (PDF) (Physical Review Letters, Volume 89, Number 5, July 2002)

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The Spiral Structure of the Milky Way, Cosmic Rays, and Ice Age Epochs on Earth (New Astronomy, Volume 8, Issue 1, pp. 39-77, January 2003)

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Galactic cosmic ray and El Niño–Southern Oscillation trends in International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project D2 low-cloud properties (Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 108, Number D6, pp. AAC 6-1, March 2003)

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Solar Influence on Earth’s Climate (Space Science Reviews, Volume 107, Numbers 1-2, pp. 317-325, April 2003)

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Toward a solution to the early faint Sun paradox: A lower cosmic ray flux from a stronger solar wind (PDF) (Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 108, Number A12, pp. SSH 3-1, December 2003)

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Latitudinal dependence of low cloud amount on cosmic ray induced ionization (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Issue 16, August 2004)

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The effects of galactic cosmic rays, modulated by solar terrestrial magnetic fields, on the climate (Russian Journal of Earth Sciences, Volume 6, Number 5, October 2004)

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Formation of large NAT particles and denitrification in polar stratosphere: possible role of cosmic rays and effect of solar activity (Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, Volume 4, Issue 1, pp.1037-1062, November 2004)

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Long-term variations of the surface pressure in the North Atlantic and possible association with solar activity and galactic cosmic rays (Advances in Space Research, Volume 35, Issue 3, pp. 484-490, May 2005)

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On climate response to changes in the cosmic ray flux and radiative budget (Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 110, Issue A8, August 2005)

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Cosmic rays and the biosphere over 4 billion years (Astronomical Notes, Volume 327, Issue 9, pp. 871, 2006)

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Empirical evidence for a nonlinear effect of galactic cosmic rays on clouds (PDF) (Proceedings of the Royal Society A, Volume 462, Issue 2068, pp. 1221-1233, April 2006)

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Interstellar-Terrestrial Relations: Variable Cosmic Environments, The Dynamic Heliosphere, and Their Imprints on Terrestrial Archives and Climate (Space Science Reviews, Volume 127, Numbers 1-4, December 2006)

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Cosmoclimatology: a new theory emerges (PDF) (Astronomy & Geophysics, Volume 48, Issue 1, pp. 1.18-1.24, February 2007)

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Evidence for a physical linkage between galactic cosmic rays and regional climate time series (Advances in Space Research, Volume 40, Issue 3, pp. 353-364, February 2007)

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Experimental evidence for the role of ions in particle nucleation under atmospheric conditions (PDF) (Proceedings of the Royal Society A, Volume 463, Number 2078, p 385-396, February 2007)

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200-year variations in cosmic rays modulated by solar activity and their climatic response (Bulletin of the Russian Academy of Sciences: Physics, Volume 71, Number 7, July 2007)

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On the possible contribution of solar-cosmic factors to the global warming of XX century (Bulletin of the Russian Academy of Sciences: Physics, Volume 71, Number 7, July 2007)

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Cosmic rays and climate of the Earth: possible connection (Comptes Rendus Geosciences, Volume 340, Issue 7, pp. 441-450, July 2008)

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Cosmic Rays and Climate (Surveys in Geophysics, Volume 28, Numbers 5-6, November 2007)

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Coal and fuel burning effects on the atmosphere as mediated by the atmospheric electric field and galactic cosmic rays flux (International Journal of Global Warming, Volume 1, Numbers 1-2, pp. 57-65, July 2009)

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Cosmic ray decreases affect atmospheric aerosols and clouds (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 36, Issue 15, August 2009)

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A relationship between galactic cosmic radiation and tree rings (New Phytologist, Volume 184, Issue 3, pp. 545-551, September 2009)

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Solar: 80–120 yr Long-term solar induced effects on the earth, past and predictions (Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, Volume 31, Issues 1-3, pp. 113-122, 2006)

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A decadal solar effect in the tropics in July–August (PDF) (Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 66, Issue 18, pp. 1767-1778, December 2004)

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A mechanism for sun-climate connection (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Issue 23, December 2005)

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A new pathway for communicating the 11-year solar cycle signal to the QBO (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Issue 18, September 2005)

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Amplifying the Pacific Climate System Response to a Small 11-Year Solar Cycle Forcing (Science, Volume 325, Number 5944, pp. 1114-1118, August 2009)

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Celestial Climate Driver: A Perspective from Four Billion Years of the Carbon Cycle (PDF) (Geoscience Canada, Volume 32, Number 1, March 2005)

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Celestial driver of Phanerozoic climate? (GSA Today, Volume 13, Issue 7, pp. 4-10, July 2003)

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Century-scale solar variability and Alaskan temperature change over the past millennium (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Issue 15, August 2004)

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Climate cyclicity in late Holocene anoxic marine sediments from the Seymour-Belize Inlet Complex (PDF) (Marine Geology, Volume 242, Issues 1-3, pp. 123-140, August 2007)

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Comparison of proxy records of climate change and solar forcing (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 23, Issue 4, pp. 359-362, February 1996)

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Cyclic Variation and Solar Forcing of Holocene Climate in the Alaskan Subarctic (PDF) (Science, Volume 301, Number 5641, pp. 1890-1893, September 2003)

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Earth’s Heat Source - The Sun (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Numbers 1-2, pp. 131-144, January 2009)

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Earth’s Radiative Equilibrium in the Solar Irradiance (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Numbers 1-2, pp. 85-95, January 2009)

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Eleven-year solar cycle signal throughout the lower atmosphere (Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 109, Issue D21, November 2004)

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Evidence for a solar signature in 20th-century temperature data from the USA and Europe (PDF) (Comptes Rendus Geosciences, Volume 340, Issue 7, pp. 421-430, July 2008)

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Evidence of Solar Variation in Tree-Ring-Based Climate Reconstructions (Solar Physics, Volume 205, Number 2, pp. 403-417, February 2002)

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Geophysical, archaeological, and historical evidence support a solar-output model for climate change (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 97, Number 23, pp. 12433-12438, November 2000)

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Global Temperature Forced by Solar Irradiation and Greenhouse Gases? (PDF) (Ambio, Volume 30, Number 6, pp. 349-350, September 2001)

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Has solar variability caused climate change that affected human culture? (Advances in Space Research, Volume 40, Issue 7, pp. 1173-1180, March 2007)

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Imprint of Galactic dynamics on Earth’s climate (PDF) (Astronomical Notes, Volume 327, Issue 9, pp. 866-870, October 2006)

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Inference of Solar Irradiance Variability from Terrestrial Temperature Changes, 1880–1993: an Astrophysical Application of the Sun-Climate Connection (PDF) (Astrophysical Journal, Volume 472, pp. 891, December 1996)

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Is solar variability reflected in the Nile River? (Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 111, Issue D21, November 2006)

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Length of the Solar Cycle: An Indicator of Solar Activity Closely Associated with Climate (Science, Volume 254, Number 5032, pp. 698-700, November 1991)

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Linkages Between Solar Activity and Climatic Responses (Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 2, pp. 239-254, March 2005)

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Linkages between solar activity, climate predictability and water resource development (PDF) (Journal of the South African Institution of Civil Engineering, Volume 49, Number 2, pp. 32–44, June 2007)

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Long-Period Cycles of the Sun’s Activity Recorded in Direct Solar Data and Proxies (Solar Physics, Volume 211, Numbers 1-2, December 2002)

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Millennium Scale Sunspot Reconstruction: Evidence For an Unusually Active Sun Since the 1940’s (PDF) (Physical Review Letters, Volume 91, Issue 21, November 2003)

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On solar forcing of Holocene climate: evidence from Scandinavia (The Holocene, Volume 6, Number 3, pp. 359-365, 1996)

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Once again about global warming and solar activity (PDF) (Journal of the Italian Astronomical Society, Volume 76, pp. 969, 2005)

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Orbital Controls on the El Niño/Southern Oscillation and the Tropical Climate (Paleoceanogrpahy, Volume 14, Number 4, pp. 441–456, 1999)

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Palaeoenvironmental evidence for solar forcing of Holocene climate: linkages to solar science (Progress in Physical Geography, Volume 23, Number 2, pp. 181-204, 1999)

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Persistent Solar Influence on North Atlantic Climate During the Holocene (Science, Volume 294, Number 5549, pp. 2130-2136, December 2001)

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Phenomenological solar contribution to the 1900–2000 global surface warming (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Issue 5, March 2006)

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Phenomenological solar signature in 400 years of reconstructed Northern Hemisphere temperature record (PDF) (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Issue 17, September 2006)

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Possible geomagnetic activity effects on weather (Annales Geophysicae, Volume 17, Number 7, pp. 925-932, July 1999)

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Possible solar forcing of century-scale drought frequency in the northern Great Plains (Geology, Volume 27, Number 3, pp. 263-266, Mar 1999)

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Regional tropospheric responses to long-term solar activity variations (Advances in Space Research, Volume 40, Issue 7, pp. 1167-1172, 2007)

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Rhodes Fairbridge and the idea that the solar system regulates the Earth’s climate (PDF) (Journal of Coastal Research, Issue 50, pp. 955-968, 2007)

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Solar activity variations and global temperature (Energy The International Journal, Volume 18, Number 12, pp. 1273-1284, 1993)

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Solar and climate signal records in tree ring width from Chile (AD 1587–1994) (Planetary and Space Science, Volume 55, Issues 1-2, pp. 158-164, January 2007)

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Solar correlates of Southern Hemisphere mid-latitude climate variability (International Journal of Climatology, Volume 22, Issue 8, pp. 901-915, May 2002)

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Solar cycles 24 and 25 and predicted climate response (Energy & Environment, Volume 17, Number 1, pp. 29-35, January 2006)

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Solar Cycle Variability, Ozone, and Climate (Science, Volume 284, Number 5412, pp. 305-308, April 1999)

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Solar Forcing of Changes in Atmospheric Circulation, Earth’s Rotation and Climate (PDF) (The Open Atmospheric Science Journal, Volume 2, pp. 181-184, August 2008)

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Solar Forcing of Climate. 1: Solar Variability (Space Science Reviews, Volume 120, Numbers 3-4, pp. 197-241, October 2005)

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Solar Forcing of Climate. 2: Evidence from the Past (Space Science Reviews, Volume 120, Numbers 3-4, pp. 243-286, October 2005)

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Solar Forcing of Drought Frequency in the Maya Lowlands (Science, Volume 292, Number 5520, pp. 1367-1370, May 2001)

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Solar forcing of the polar atmosphere (PDF) (Annals of Glaciology, Volume 41, Issue 1, pp. 147-154, 2005)

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Solar influence on the spatial structure of the NAO during the winter 1900-1999 (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 30, Issue 4, pp. 24-1, February 2003)

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Solar total irradiance variation and the global sea surface temperature record (Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 96, Number D2, pp. 2835–2844, February 1991)

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Solar variability and climate change: Geomagnetic aa index and global surface temperature (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 25, Issue 7, pp. 1035-1038, January 1998)

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Solar variability and ring widths in fossil trees (Il Nuovo Cimento C, Volume 19, Number 4, July 1996)

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Solar Variability Over the Past Several Millennia (PDF) (Space Science Reviews, Volume 125, Issue 1-4, pp. 67-79, December 2006)

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Suggestive correlations between the brightness of Neptune, solar variability, and Earth’s temperature (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 34, Issue 8, April 2007)

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Sun-Climate Linkage Now Confirmed (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Numbers 1-2, pp. 123-130, January 2009)

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Sunspots, the QBO, and the stratospheric temperature in the north polar region (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 14, Issue 5, p. 535-537, May 1987)

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Sunspots, the QBO and the stratosphere in the North Polar Region - 20 years later (Meteorologische Zeitschrift, Volume 15, Number 3, pp. 355-363, June 2006)

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Sunspots, the QBO, and the Stratosphere in the North Polar Region: An Update (Advances in Global Change Research, Volume 33, pp. 347-357, 2007)

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Superfluidity in the Solar Interior: Implications for Solar Eruptions and Climate (PDF) (Journal of Fusion Energy, Volume 21, Numbers 3-4, pp. 193-198, December 2002)

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Surface warming by the solar cycle as revealed by the composite mean difference projection (Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 34, Issue 14, July 2007)

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The 60-year solar modulation of global air temperature: the Earth’s rotation and atmospheric circulation connection (Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 88, Numbers 3-4, March 2007)

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The influence of the 11 yr solar cycle on the interannual–centennial climate variability (Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 67, Issues 8-9, pp. 793-805 ,May-June 2005)

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The Influence of the Solar Cycle and QBO on the Late-Winter Stratospheric Polar Vortex (Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, Volume 64, Issue 4, pp. 1267–1283, April 2007)

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The link between the solar dynamo and climate - The evidence from a long mean air temperature series from Northern Ireland (Irish Astronomical Journal, Volume 21, Number 3-4, pp. 251-254, September 1994)

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The signal of the 11-year sunspot cycle in the upper troposphere-lower stratosphere (Space Science Reviews, Volume 80, Numbers 3-4, pp. 393-410, May 1997)

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The Sun–Earth Connection in Time Scales from Years to Decades and Centuries (Space Science Reviews, Volume 95, Numbers 1-2, pp. 625-637, January 2001)

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The Sun’s Role in Regulating the Earth’s Climate Dynamics (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Numbers 1-2, pp. 25-73, January 2009)

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Understanding Solar Behaviour and its Influence on Climate (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Numbers 1-2, pp. 145-159, January 2009)

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Using the oceans as a calorimeter to quantify the solar radiative forcing (Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 113, Issue A11, November 2008)

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Variations of solar coronal hole area and terrestrial lower tropospheric air temperature from 1979 to mid-1998: astronomical forcings of change in earth’s climate? (PDF) (New Astronomy, Volume 4, Issue 8, pp. 563-579, January 2000)

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What do we really know about the Sun-climate connection? (Advances in Space Research, Volume 20, Issue 4-5, pp. 913-921, September 1997)

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Will We Face Global Warming in the Nearest Future? (Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 43, pp. 124-127, 2003)

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IPCC:

Biased Policy Advice from The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Numbers 7-8, pp. 929-936, December 2007)

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Crystal balls, virtual realities and ‘storylines’ (Energy & Environment, Volume 12, Number 4, pp. 343-349, July 2001)

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Has the IPCC exaggerated adverse impact of Global Warming on human societies? (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 19, Number 5, pp. 713-719, September 2008)

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The IPCC Emission Scenarios: An Economic-Statistical Critique (Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Numbers 2-3, pp. 159-185, May 2003)

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The IPCC future projections: are they plausible? (PDF) (Climate Research, Volume 10, Number 2, pp. 155–162, August 1998)

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The IPCC: Structure, Processes and Politics Climate Change - the Failure of Science (Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Numbers 7-8, pp. 1073-1078, December 2007)

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The UN IPCC’s Artful Bias: Summary of Findings: Glaring Omissions, False Confidence and Misleading Statistics in the Summary for Policymakers (Energy & Environment, Volume 13, Number 3, pp. 311-328, July 2002)

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Kyoto Protocol:

A 2004 View of the Kyoto Protocol (Energy & Environment, Volume 15, Number 3, pp. 505-511, July 2004)

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After Kyoto: A Global Scramble for Advantage (PDF) (The Independent Review, Volume 4, Number 1, pp. 19-40, 1999)

  • Bruce Yandle

Climate Change: Beyond Kyoto (Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 5, pp. 763-766, September 2005)

  • Anne, Lauvergeon

Climate policy and uncertainty (Energy & Environment, Volume 12, Numbers 5-6, pp. 415-423, November 2001)

  • Catrinus J. Jepma

Clouds Over Kyoto (PDF) (Regulation, Volume 21, Number 1, pp. 57-63, 1998)

  • Jerry Taylor

The Role of the IPCC is To Assess Climate Change Not Advocate Kyoto (Energy & Environment, Volume 15, Number 3, pp. 369-373, July 2004)

  • Ian Castles

Time to ditch Kyoto (Nature, Volume 449, Issue 7165, pp. 973-975, October 2007)

  • Gwyn Prins, Steve Rayner

Socio-Economic:

Best practices in prediction for decision-making: Lessons from the atmospheric and earth sciences (PDF) (Ecology, Volume 84, Number 6, pp. 1351-1358, June 2003)

  • Roger A. Pielke Jr., Richard T. Conant

Calling the Carbon Bluff: Why Not Tie Carbon Taxes to Actual Levels of Warming? Both Skeptics and Alarmists Should Expect Their Wishes to Be Answered (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 19, Number 5, pp. 707-711, September 2008)

  • Ross McKitrick

Climate Change 2007: Lifting the taboo on adaptation (Nature, Volume 445, Issue 7128, pp. 597-598, February 2007)

  • Roger A. Pielke Jr, Gwyn Prins, Steve Rayner, Daniel Sarewitz

Climate change and the world bank: Opportunity for global governance? (Energy & Environment, Volume 10, Number 1, pp. 27-50, January 1999)

  • Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen

Climate Policy : Quo Vadis? (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Numbers 1-2, pp. 207-213, January 2009)

  • Hans Labohm

Climate Vulnerability and the Indispensable Value of Industrial Capitalism (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 5, pp. 733-745, September 2009)

  • Keith H. Lockitch

Discounting the Future (PDF) (Regulation, Volume 32, Number 1, pp. 36-40, 2009)

  • Indur M. Goklany

Environmentalism in the light of Menger and Mises (PDF) (Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics, Volume 5, Number 2, pp. 3-15, June 2002)

  • George Reisman

Free speech about climate change (Society, Volume 44, Number 4, May 2007)

  • Christopher Monckton

Global Warming and Its Dangers (PDF) (The Independent Review, Volume 8, Number 4, 2004)

  • Jeffrey R. Clark, Dwight R. Lee

Global Warming, the Politicization of Science, and Michael Crichton’s State of Fear (PDF) (Journal of Scientific Exploration, Volume 19, Number 2, pp. 247-256, 2005)

  • David Deming

Global Warming: The Social Construction of A Quasi-Reality? (Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 6, pp. 805-813, November 2007)

  • Dennis Ambler

Governments and Climate Change Issues: The case for a new approach (Energy & Environment, Volume 17, Number 4, pp. 619-632, July 2006)

  • David R. Henderson

Governments and Climate Change Issues: The case for rethinking (World Economics Journal, Volume 8, Issue 2, April 2007)

  • David R. Henderson

How Serious is the Global Warming Threat? (Society, Volume 44, Number 5, pp. 45-50, September 2007)

  • Roy W. Spencer

Integrated strategies to reduce vulnerability and advance adaptation, mitigation, and sustainable development (PDF) (Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change, Volume 12, Number 5, pp. 755-786, June 2007)

  • Indur M. Goklany

Is a Richer-but-warmer World Better than Poorer-but-cooler Worlds? (Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Numbers 7-8, pp. 1023-1048, December 2007)

  • Indur M. Goklany

Is Climate Change the “Defining Challenge of Our Age”? (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 3, pp. 279-302, July 2009)

  • Indur M. Goklany

Managing Planet Earth; Adaptation and Cosmology (PDF) (The Cato Journal, Volume 19 Number 1, pp. 69-83, 1999 )

  • Curtis A. Pendergraft

Mitigation versus compensation in global warming policy (PDF) (Economics Bulletin, Volume 17, pp. 1-6, December 2001)

  • Ross McKitrick

Relative Contributions of Global Warming to Various Climate Sensitive Risks, and their Implications for Adaptation and Mitigation (PDF) (Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Number 6, pp. 797-822, November 2003)

  • Indur M. Goklany

Rolling the DICE: William Nordhaus’s Dubious Case for a Carbon Tax (PDF) (The Independent Review, Volume 14, Number 2, 2009)

  • Robert P. Murphy

Science and Environmental Policy-Making: Bias-Proofing the Assessment Process (PDF) (Canadian Journal of Agricultural Economics, Volume 53, Number 4, pp. 275-290, December 2005)

  • Ross McKitrick

Scientific Shortcomings in the EPA’s Endangerment Finding from Greenhouse Gases (PDF) (The Cato Journal, Volume 29 Number 3, pp. 497-521, 2009)

  • Patrick J. Michaels, Paul C. Knappenberger

Should We Have Acted Thirty Years Ago to Prevent Climate Change? (PDF) (The Independent Review, Volume 11, Number 2, 2006)

  • Randall G. Holcombe

Strategies to Enhance Adaptability: Technological Change, Economic Growth and Free Trade (PDF) (Climatic Change, Volume 30, pp. 427-449, 1995)

  • Indur M. Goklany

The Eco-Industrial Complex in USA - Global Warming and Rent-Seeking Coalitions (Energy & Environment, Volume 19, Number 7, pp. 941-958, December 2008)

  • Ivan Jankovic

The evolution of an energy contrarian (Annual Review of Energy and the Environment, Volume 211, pp. 31-67, November 1996)

  • Henry R. Linden

The Government Grant System: Inhibitor of Truth and Innovation? (PDF) (Journal of Information Ethics, Volume 16, Number 1, Spring 2007)

  • Donald W. Miller

The Politicised Science of Greenhouse Climate Change (Energy & Environment, Volume 15, Number 5, pp. 853-860, September 2004)

  • Garth Paltridge

The Real Climate Change Morality Crisis: Climate change initiatives perpetuate poverty, disease and premature death (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 5, pp. 763-777, September 2009)

  • Paul Driessen

Turning the big knob: An evaluation of the use of energy policy to modulate future climate impacts (Energy & Environment, Volume 11, Number 3, pp. 255-275, May 2000)

  • Roger A. Pielke Jr., R. Klein, D. Sarewitz)

When scientists politicize science: making sense of controversy over The Skeptical Environmentalist (PDF) (Environmental Science & Policy, Volume 7, Issue 5, pp. 405-417, October 2004)

  • Roger A. Pielke Jr.

Stern Review:

Climate Science and the Stern Review (PDF) (World Economics, Volume 8, Number 2, April–June 2007)

  • Robert M. Carter, C. R. de Freitas, Indur M. Goklany, David Holland, Richard S. Lindzen

The Stern Review: A Dual Critique (PDF) (World Economics, Volume 7, Number 4, pp. 165-232, October–December 2006)

  • Robert M. Carter, C. R. de Freitas, Indur M. Goklany, David Holland, Richard S. Lindzen, Ian Byatt, Ian Castles, Indur M. Goklany, David Henderson, Nigel Lawson, Ross McKitrick, Julian Morris, Alan Peacock, Colin Robinson, Robert Skidelsky

  • Response to Simmonds and Steffen (PDF) (World Economics, Volume 8, Number 2, April–June 2007)

  • David Holland, Robert M. Carter, C. R. de Freitas, Indur M. Goklany, Richard S. Lindzen

Is Stern Review on climate change alarmist? (Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 5, pp. 521-532, September 2007)

  • S. Niggol Seo

The Stern Review on Climate Change: Inconvenient Sensitivities (Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 5, pp. 779-798, September 2009)

  • Sergey Mityakov, Christof Rühl

Paper Count: 450

Journal Citation List:

AAPG Bulletin Advances in Global Change Research Advances in Space Research Ambio Annales Geophysicae Annals of Glaciology Annual Review of Energy and the Environment Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics Astronomical Notes Astronomy & Geophysics Astrophysics and Space Science Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society Bulletin of the Russian Academy of Sciences: Physics Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology Canadian Journal of Agricultural Economics Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences Central European Journal of Physics Chemical Innovation Climate Dynamics Climate of the Past Climate Research Climatic Change Comptes Rendus Geosciences Contemporary South Asia Earth and Planetary Science Letters Ecological Complexity Ecological Monographs Ecology Economics Bulletin Emerging Infectious Diseases Energy & Environment * Energy Fuels Energy Sources Energy The International Journal Environmental Geology Environmental Geosciences Environmental Health Perspectives Environmental Research Environmental Science & Policy Environmental Science and Pollution Research Environmental Software Environmetrics Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union Futures Geografiska Annaler: Series A, Physical Geography GeoJournal Geology Geomagnetism and Aeronomy Geophysical Research Letters Geoscience Canada Global and Planetary Change GSA Today Holocene Hydrological Sciences Journal Il Nuovo Cimento C Interfaces International Journal of Biometeorology International Journal of Climatology International Journal of Environmental Studies International Journal of Forecasting International Journal of Global Warming International Journal of Modern Physics International Journal of Remote Sensing International Quarterly for Asian Studies Irish Astronomical Journal Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics Journal of Climate Journal of Coastal Research Journal of Fusion Energy Journal of Geophysical Research Journal of Information Ethics Journal of Lake Sciences Journal of Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics Journal of Scientific Exploration Journal of the American Water Resources Association Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences Journal of the Italian Astronomical Society Journal of the South African Institution of Civil Engineering Lancet Infectious Diseases Latvian Journal of Physics and Technical Sciences Malaria Journal Marine Geology Marine Pollution Bulletin Meteorology and Atmospheric Physics Meteorologische Zeitschrift Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change Natural Hazards Review Nature Nature Geoscience New Astronomy New Concepts In Global Tectonics New Phytologist New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research Norwegian Polar Institute Letters Oceanologica Acta Paleontological Journal Paleoceanography Physical Geography Physical Review Letters Physics Letters A Planetary and Space Science PLoS Biology Proceedings of the Estonian Academy of Sciences Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Proceedings of the Royal Society Progress in Physical Geography Public Administration Review Pure and Applied Geophysics Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics Quarterly Journal of the Hungarian Meteorological Service Quaternary Research Quaternary Science Reviews Regulation * Russian Journal of Earth Sciences Science Science of the Total Environment Science, Technology & Human Values Social Studies of Science Society Solar Physics South African Journal of Science Space Science Reviews Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and Biomolecular Spectroscopy Surveys in Geophysics Technology The Cato Journal * The Independent Review The Open Atmospheric Science Journal Theoretical and Applied Climatology Topics in Catalysis Weather Weather and Forecasting World Economics Journal

Journal Count: 135

  • Energy & Environment is a peer-reviewed interdisciplinary academic journal (ISSN: 0958-305X)
  • Regulation is a peer-reviewed academic journal (ISSN: 0147-0590)
  • The Cato Journal is a peer-reviewed academic journal (ISSN: 0273-3072)

Notes - The papers support skepticism of “man-made” global warming or the environmental or economic effects of. Comments, Erratum, Replies and Responses are not included in the peer-reviewed paper count.

Resources: The Anti “Man-Made” Global Warming Resource The Anti Wikipedia Resource The Truth about RealClimate.org


  • Haddock 2009-11-16 12:08:24
    Sobre esta historia del cacareado "peer-review" encontré cosas interesantes: Un estudio de un tal Juan Miguel Campanario, que debe ser profesor de física de la Universidad de Alcalá http://www2.uah.es/jmc/ , titulado EL SISTEMA DE REVISIÓN POR EXPERTOS (PEER REVIEW): MUCHOS PROBLEMAS Y POCAS SOLUCIONES. que dice cosas como ésta: Existen indicios adicionales que sugieren que los referees evalúan los trabajos según sus resultados, por ejemplo, dependiendo de que apoyen o contradigan sus propias creencias. Así, por ejemplo, en una investigación se pidió a 33 investigadores que evaluaran un documento ficticio sobre la estimulación eléctrica nerviosa. Los resultados muestran que las preconcepciones de los referees tenían una clara influencia en la evaluación, de modo que los revisores que era probable que estuvieran de acuerdo con los resultados del trabajo tendían a juzgarlo menos duramente que los referees que, debido a sus ideas, eran más proclives a discrepar. O como esta: Las razones que permiten explicar los episodios de rechazo por parte de referees y editores de revistas científicas a trabajos que posteriormente son recompensados con el premio Nobel, son diversas, pero, con frecuencia, tienen su origen en la resistencia de los científicos a aceptar nuevas teorías y descubrimientos. Muchas veces, una observación o un descubrimiento choca frontalmente con las concepciones y las teorías dominantes que, por ser dominantes, conforman los marcos conceptuales que siguen los referees y los editores de las revistas. En estos casos se pone en evidencia la dificultad que existe para que los propios científicos acepten nuevas ideas. http://www2.uah.es/jmc/an24.pdf
    • plazaeme 2009-11-16 15:35:48
      Gracias, Haddock. Bien interesante. Y si a un sistema que ya tiene sus talones de aquiles le sumas la politización de lo del clima, más el ser el asunto científico en que más pasta* se gasta (de lejos) de toda la historia de la humanidad, pues imagina. (*) Se gasta un pastón, pero solo si es para confirmar el alarmismo. Para la tesis contraria no.
  • Rafa Brancas 2009-11-16 19:49:44
    Newsweek le atiza a Al Gore a cuenta del estudio del instituto Goddard (NASA) sobre la importancia relativa del CO2 en el 'calentamiento': 'La evolución de un Eco-profeta': http://www.newsweek.com/id/220552/page/3
    • plazaeme 2009-11-16 20:33:40
      Sí, había visto el estudio. Que el CO2 "solo" es responsable del 43% del calentamiento, y que sería más barato / eficaz perseguir otros gases. Bueno, que se diviertan con eso. Perderían la motivación política.
  • ceratonia 2009-11-16 23:09:13
    Simple y llanamente, GRACIAS.
  • Ferran P. Vilar 2009-11-16 23:35:57
    Energy & Environment no tiene nada de peer-reviwed. Véase Wikipedia. Climate Research tampoco. La Sonia ha manifestado que toene su 'propia agenda'. La mayoría de los que si son peer-reviewed no contradicen para nada el cambio climático antropogénico, y los demás señalan pequeños errores o mejoras incrementales. No me hagas buscar más, con los 25 primeros he tenido bastante. ¡Anda ya!
    • plazaeme 2009-11-17 00:23:43
      Bueno, lo que diga Wikipedia me preocupa medio poco. Pero ni siquiera dice que E&E no sea "peer reviewed" sino que no es ISI. Y mira Wikipedia:
      The journal takes a skeptical view towards climate change. Skeptics on the journal's editorial staff include Boehmer-Christiansen herself and anthropologist Benny Peiser. Contributors considered as climate skeptics or contrarians, have included Sallie Baliunas, Robert M. Carter, Ian Castles, Bjorn Lomborg, Patrick Michaels, Ross McKitrick, Stephen McIntyre, Garth Paltridge, Roger Pielke Jr., Fred Singer, and Willie Soon.
      ¿Que, marcando a los herejes al fuego? ¿Y agenda? ¿Me hablas de agenda? ¡Jooorrrrl! ¿Y que me vas a decir de de todas esas "Nature" y "Science" que se niegan a antregar los datos de los estudios? Bien, te pongo palabras del notable físico Lubos Motl sobre esta lista: Dear Neven, I won’t study every single paper on the list but I know roughly 100 of papers in the list in detail, and these papers certainly do represent what they’re claimed to represent – papers with insights or opinions running against the “consensus”, whether or not the latter word is defined by the IPCC or Al Gore. Otherwise I would never claim that all papers on the list are 100% correct, high-quality papers or that they support 100% of a skeptic’s position. There are surely differences and there are various problems with various papers – but that’s the case of nearly all papers in the world. At any rate, the people who claim that there exist no peer-reviewed printed results that disagree with what is being presented as the “consensus” (which is not well-defined notion, but even at this ill-defined status, it is self-evidently flawed) must live outside reality. They mentally live in a religious sect that denies the reality and that needs to deny reality in order to locally sustain their otherwise unsustainable belief system.
      • Ferran P. Vilar 2009-11-17 12:08:24
        He trabajado en prensa técnica (que es la calificación que tiene E&E) durante 30 años y he visto qué se publica, quién lo publica y por qué se publica. Peer-reviewed tendrá sus fallos y será perfectible pero es lo mejor que hay y de ahí ha salido todo el conocimiento científico del mundo. Del millón de papers que se publican cada año en P-R más de 10.000 confirman, reconfirman y archiconfirman el peligro. No conozco tus motivaciones para negar la realidad, pero para mi que un dia comenzaréis a dudar hasta del principio de Arquímedes...
  • plazaeme 2009-11-17 20:02:11
    Muy interesante, Ferrán. En realidad estás planteando tres discusiones distintas, simultáneamente. O sea, un saco con una alegre mezcolanza. * La calidad del "peer reviewed", y sus posibles sesgos. (Muy preocupante) * La cantidad de "papers" que han confirmado lo del CO2. (Exactamente ninguno) * Mis motivaciones para negar la fantasía. (Cierto respeto por el método científico y la razón) Pero justamente te has olvidado de la única que sería relevante: mis argumentos para no aceptar la última fantochada del fin del mundo por culpa del hombre pecador. Estaré encantado de charlar de cualquiera de esas cuestiones. Pero una por una, y con los argumentos bien claros. O sea, estilo académico. Saludos.
  • Ferran P. Vilar 2009-11-18 09:38:50
    Creo que es mejor dejar los argumentos académicos para su lugar, a saber, la Academia, que es donde están sometidos a riguroso escrutinio. Yo no veo todos los temas que mencionas en mi mensaje. En todo caso olvidas uno: los criterios de publicación en las revistas 'no-PR'. Tengo una curiosidad: si no te crees lo que dicen los artículos de las revistas P-R, ni lo que de Wikipedia está fundamentado, ni los libros de texto, supongo, que es donde los estudiantes de 1º de física estudian los principios relacionados con las frecuencia de vibración de las moléculas de los gases... ¿a quién crees?
    • plazaeme 2009-11-18 10:17:31
      Veo que te sigue poniendo la estrategia de hacer un saco revuelto, donde no hay forma de saber de qué estamos hablando, por no hablar de la posibilidad de alguna conclusión. Es un buen estilo para la polémica tipo telebasura, pero no es un buen esquema para enterarse y sacar conclusiones. Por partes. 1) Afirmas: Del millón de papers que se publican cada año en P-R más de 10.000 confirman, reconfirman y archiconfirman el peligro. Cítame solo uno de esos 10.000, una sola prueba del peligro, y la examinamos. 2) No me interesan especialmente los criterios de publicación, ni de las revistas P-R, ni las de las no P-R. Esos criterios son muy útiles cuando no quieres profundizar en un asunto, por falta de tiempo o lo que sea, y vas a basar tu opinión en la confianza que depositas en un medio. No es este el caso, y sería una enorme insensatez aplicar ese sistema en un tema tan politizado y con tan formidables intereses económicos por ambas partes. En muy opinión en este caso no queda más remedio que prescindir de confianzas, y meterse en el charco atendiendo a los razonamientos y pruebas de ambas partes. ¿Estás en desacuerdo? 3) Tengo una curiosidad: si no te crees lo que dicen los artículos de las revistas P-R, ni lo que de Wikipedia está fundamentado, ni los libros de texto, * Creer, no me creo nada. Dejo eso para la religión o para la ideología. Y si me encuentro con alguien que me hable de "creer" en un tema científico, me echo a reir, o a llorar, dependiendo de como me pille. * "Creer" a Wikipedia en un tema politizado, solo lo puede hacer un ignorante que no sabe nada de Wikipedia (soy editor de la misma) o un interesado con no poca jeta. 4) donde los estudiantes de 1º de física estudian los principios relacionados con las frecuencia de vibración de las moléculas de los gases… Los principios están demostrados y son replicables. Si no, no serían principios. El asunto del CO2 en el clima, desde el punto de vista de "peligro, ni de broma. Y lo primero que debería de hacer una educación que se precie es enseñar a distinguir entre un caso y otro. 5) ¿a quién crees? Básicamente a nadie. No creo a las personas; acepto las pruebas, cuando lo son. ¿Te parece muy extraordinario? Pues se llama método científico.
    • plazaeme 2009-11-18 11:57:09
      A ver, colega, ¿te parece tan extraordinario lo que según tú "creo"? Pues mira una encuesta entre meteorólogos de televisiones USA: Solo el 45% se atreven a afirmar, con el IPCC, que el calentamiento del sistema climático es inequívoco. * Muy de acuerdo: 17% * De acuerdo: 28% * Neutral: 21% * Desacuerdo: 20% * Muy en desacuerdo: 14% La mitad están en desacuerdo con la afirmación del IPCC de que la mayor parte del calentamiento desde 1950 es de origen humano. * Muy de acuerdo: 8% * De acuerdo: 16% * Neutral: 25% * Desacuerdo: 24% * Muy en desacuerdo: 26% Respecto a si los modelos climáticos son fiables en sus predicciones sobre el calentamiento, el 62% está en contra. * Muy de acuerdo: 3% * De acuerdo: 16% * Neutral: 20% * En desacuerdo: 37% * Muy en desacuerdo: 25% ¿El calentamiento global es una estafa? Solo un 45% dice que no. * Muy en desacuerdo: 22% * En desacuerdo: 23% * Neutral: 26% * De acuerdo: 19% * Muy de acuerdo 10% /2009/11/18/la-mayoria-de-los-meteorologos-le-sacan-un-dedo-al-ipcc/ http://ams.allenpress.com/archive/1520-0477/90/10/pdf/i1520-0477-90-10-1457.pdf Ya ves; qué cosas.
      • Ferran 2009-11-18 21:48:28
        Bueno, esto ha sido clarificador. Como supongo que debes considerarte persona debo deducir que no te crees a ti mismo. Si no te valen las pruebas es porque tu mismo eliges qué cosa lo es y cuál no lo es. Pero como no te crees, eldiálogo es imposible. Un saludo cordial.
        • plazaeme 2009-11-18 22:18:25
          ¿Pero tú de qué vas, Ferran? ¡Pues claro que no me creo a mi mismo, si no tengo pruebas! ¿No eres capaz de distinguir un "wishfull thinking". o un "creo que", de un "tengo la prueba de"? Si no te valen las pruebas es porque tu mismo eliges qué cosa lo es y cuál no lo es No, y la prueba es que me presentes eso que crees que es una prueba, y lo discutamos. Todo el mundo se puede equivocar en el juicio de una prueba. Pero para eso están las discusiones públicas, para que se puedan juzgar y contrastar argumentos contrarios respecto a una prueba. Haces lo que hacen todos los alamistas. Cuando les piden una prueba, contestan con atgumentos de autoridad "lo dice fulano" y con el aun más asomboros argumento del consenso, que ni es argumento ni existe. ¿El diálogo es imposible? ¿Si no acepto unas pruebas que no me presentas, o si no acepto el argumento de autoridad (que no vale en ciencia) el diálogo es imposible? Yo que tú empezaría a revisar la idea que tienes sobre el concepto "diálogo". Saludos.
  • Cambio climático: 450 estudios “peer reviewed” escépticos 2009-11-24 19:32:48
    [...] Cambio climático: 450 estudios “peer reviewed” escépticos [...]
  • Kelly 2009-11-24 20:52:34
    A lo mejor el objetivo de este articulo es crear polemica para asi recibir visitas y comentarios, porque como bien alguien comentó en meneame. Si pretendes ser imparcial, y aportas 450 estudios de un lado, aporta 450 del otro. Si no, estás siendo tan tendencioso y partidista como los otros. Presenta los datos que la gente saque sus propias conclusiones, ademas llamarnos mamporrerillos tambien demuestra tu falta de tolerancia a las ideas que no son iguales a la tuya. R: Te agradecería que no me hagas perder el tiempo con obvios no-argumentos. 1) No tengo que poner otros 450 "del otro lado". Hay muchísimos más, y cualquiera lo sabe. Pero la discusión es que alegan que no hay literatura no alarmista "peer reviewed", y por eso basta y sobra poner la literatura escéptica, o que contradice la alarmista. Lo entiende hasta un niño. Y aparte esecifico que se trata de dejarlo útil para consulta de quien se encuentre con los ... 2) Mamporrerillos. Me refiero a los que se niegan a aceptar un argumento muy claro y fácil de una evidente autoridad en la materia, por ejemplo Lindzen o Pielke, si no se lo sirves en una revista guay. ¿Algún problema con el término? ¿Necesitas que te haga un dibujito?
  • Juan María Cisneros 2009-12-14 20:14:39
    Muchas gracias, plazaeme, por tu extenso trabajo. Gracias porque con tu recopilación me ahorro gran parte del que pensaba acometer. Siempre parto de la duda, cuando pretendo acercarme al conocimiento más probable. Me gustaría tener una charla contigo sobre estos temas. Un saludo.
    • plazaeme 2009-12-14 20:53:06
      Gracias a tí, Juan María por comentar. Pero la recopilación no es mía, solo la he copiado. Para charlar, cuando quieras. En cualquier caso esto del blog no es tan mal sistema. Y si quieres poner alguna entrada tú mismo de vez en cuando, sé bienvenido.
  • kupen 2009-12-18 15:44:38
    no hay duda que lo del cambio climático, no es nada mas que una farsa, es cosa de conversar con cualquier paleantologo y q te explique el calendario paleoclimatico,la evidencia esta hay. las conclusiones son obvias. Si los termómetros de las estaciones y las lecturas de los satélites y globos sonda indican que la atmósfera se enfría, ¿por qué las naciones del mundo deben cometer suicido firmando el nefasto Protocolo de Kyoto? ¿cuáles son, entonces, las motivaciones que se encuentran detrás de toda esta gigantesca campaña de terror relacionada con un inexistente aumento de la temperatura de la Tierra? Geopolítica e intereses corporativos multinacionales juegan un papel fundamental. Los pueblos atrasados pagan los gastos de la fiesta. los poderosos gobiernan bajo los terrores apocalípticos, a ellos les conviene tenernos muertos de miedo.....
  • Immigration Lawyers in Essex 2012-10-30 16:09:01
    Wow that was unusual. I just wrote an really long comment but after I clicked submit my comment didn't show up. Grrrr... well I'm not writing all that over again. Regardless, just wanted to say wonderful blog!
  • Haddock 2012-10-30 18:47:13
    Qué tiempos aquellos en que el amigo Ferrán se atrevía a enseñar la patita...
  • self confidence 2013-05-01 00:42:03
    I do not even know how I ended up here, but I thought this post was great. I don't know who you are but certainly you are going to a famous blogger if you aren't already 😉 Cheers!