I post news pretty regularly. No, news articles are not peer-reviewed scientific research. They do cite peer-reviewed scientific research.
The basic physical argument is not opinion. Its so simple it honestly doesnt even require citation.
SST and water vapor are simple measurables. The part about ~half being due to climate change is off-the-cuff, granted. Its impossible to comment on current events in real time through peer-reviewed outlets though. So are scientists not allowed to talk news?
I wonder why theyre attacking UCS. My article cited the NCA. As you can see the
NCA chapters first figures go back to 1900. Your blogs figure has a different focus and uses a different metric -- it and the NCAs just both start in 1958. I think that particular figure started in 1958 because that was the past 50 years at the time of the figures assembly. You can follow the NCA citation to its
original context, p.32. I dont know the origin of your blogs figure as it links elsewhere. Maybe it was because most of the CO2 and temperature increase has been since the 50s? I dont suspect anything nefarious.
I dont require peer-reviewed
posts. But if someone does cite peer-reviewed research, I expect them to provide proper context and not horrifically misrepresent the authors position (*cough* SandVol)
Thats not at all what it said.
No
Just no
Red herring. All else being equal, increasing temperature increases absolute humidity. That is the point.
Like my article noted, super cold winters typically have less precipitation. Likewise, colder climates generally have little precipitation.
Geography certainly affects weather and climate, especially relief and water bodies. This noreaster was an example of that: polar air mass from land meets tropical moisture from sea.
Why do you think different regions have different climate predictions? That gets at the heart of the difference between global warming and climate change.
Agreed
You misunderstand. The article does not state that global warming caused this blizzard (it explicitly makes that distinction); its just saying that the observation is consistent with climate predictions.
There is tons of peer-reviewed research on AGWs impact on the hydrologic cycle.
Heres the first hit from a quick google scholar. Check the citation web. You will find dozens, hundreds of articles on the topic. Follow the NCAs citation web. The basic physical argument is non-controversial. Its just counter-intuitive that global warming can cause heavier snowfall.