tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post5165487746571746924..comments2024-03-19T03:14:04.172-04:00Comments on Rabett Run: Eli can retire 1EliRabetthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07957002964638398767noreply@blogger.comBlogger7125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-59888817743260778082010-11-26T13:03:14.948-05:002010-11-26T13:03:14.948-05:00Seriously, Arkadiusz?
Let me point out first that...Seriously, Arkadiusz?<br /><br />Let me point out first that Beck and Massen in their new paper still fail to explain how the CO2 in the atmosphere suddenly goes 'monotonic' upwards from the time we started measuring on Mauna Loa. Do you think this is a Mauna Loa issue? Think again, it has been measured on many different places, including on Antarctica, thousands of kilometers away from any active volcanoes.<br /><br />And then there's your link to bacteria. A whole post on a blog trying to claim CO2 may be decreased by bacteria. No mechanistic explanation, just linking the two. But there is an interesting claim that the bacteria live in an oxygen-free environment. Too bad that that is wrong, there IS oxygen in the gas bubbles. Hmm...what to do. Believe someone with an unsubstantiated claim, or note the contradictions in his argumentation and reality?<br /><br />Oh, and you might want to know that the protein that inhibits ice crystallization is INSIDE the bacteria. It's the reason it can survive in such cold temperatures. Note that they are essentially in stasis at freezing temperatures.Marcohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07262670367947223521noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-37913539999145052522010-11-26T05:57:34.400-05:002010-11-26T05:57:34.400-05:00By the way for example you know that:
- A bacteri...By the way for example you know that:<br /><br />- <a href="http://www.springerlink.com/content/lk62448r21983n06/" rel="nofollow">A bacterial ice-binding protein from the Vostok ice core, James A. Raymond, Brent C. Christner and Stephan C. Schuster, 2008.</a>:<br />“A bacterial strain recovered from glacial ice at a depth of 3,519 m [!], just above the accreted ice from Subglacial Lake Vostok, was found to produce a 54 kDa ice-binding protein (GenBank EU694412) that is similar to ice-binding proteins previously found in <b>sea ice diatoms</b>, a snow mold, and a sea ice bacterium. <b>The protein has the ability to inhibit the recrystallization of ice...</b>”<br /><br />- <a href="http://www.science.psu.edu/news-and-events/2008-news/Loveland-Curtze5-2008.htm" rel="nofollow">A Survivor in Greenland: A Novel Bacterial Species is Found Trapped in 120,000-Year-Old Ice</a>:<br />“3 June 2008 — A team of Penn State scientists has discovered a new ultra-small species of bacteria that has survived for more than 120,000 years within the ice of a Greenland glacier at a depth of <b>nearly two miles [...].</b>” <br />“This new species is among the ubiquitous, yet mysterious, ultra-small bacteria, which are so tiny that the cells <b>are able to pass through microbiological filters.</b>”<br />“The ultra-small size of the new species could be one explanation for why it was able to survive for so long in the Greenland glacier. Called Chryseobacterium greenlandensis ..."<br />“The organism is one of only <b>about 10 [!] scientifically described new species originating from polar ice and glaciers.”</b>.<br /><br />A similar work is already more than 100 ...<br /> Arkadiusz SemczyszakAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-52737114838313325522010-11-26T05:55:13.953-05:002010-11-26T05:55:13.953-05:00Eli must “retire”;
Beck wrote in 2009 a new paper ...Eli must “retire”;<br />Beck wrote in 2009 a new paper with Massen (Accurate estimation of CO2 background level from near ground measurements at non-mixed environments) and introduced <a href="http://www.biomind.de/realCO2/bilder/CO2back1826-1960eorevk.jpg" rel="nofollow"> a new graph:</a> I will <a rel="nofollow"> add it</a> <br /><br />... and another objections to the ice core : <a href="http://themigrantmind.blogspot.com/2010/01/does-algae-reduce-ice-core-co2.html" rel="nofollow">Does Algae Reduce the Ice Core CO2?</a>, <a href="http://hubpages.com/hub/ICE-Core-CO2-Records-Ancient-Atmospheres-Or-Geophysical-Artifacts" rel="nofollow">ICE Core CO2 Records - Ancient Atmospheres Or Geophysical Artifacts ?</a>Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-70603112249614913262010-03-31T22:05:16.034-04:002010-03-31T22:05:16.034-04:00True, and Eli intends to go through the comments t...True, and Eli intends to go through the comments to pick out the juicy ones. Beats workingEliRabetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07957002964638398767noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-751376108405660712010-03-31T20:44:37.732-04:002010-03-31T20:44:37.732-04:00There really ought to be a terse web page somewher...There really ought to be a terse web page somewhere, with a list of truly awful papers, so that folks like the EPA could say:<br /><br />"Send comments, but if you favorably reference any of this list of papers, we will simply ignore it, except to post it on a website for dumb submissions."John Masheyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17786354229618237133noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-16073985894373156912010-03-31T17:01:54.891-04:002010-03-31T17:01:54.891-04:00woa that is like 100 years of blog posts right the...woa that is like 100 years of blog posts right thereCthulhunoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-89314409041389647762010-03-31T01:53:39.548-04:002010-03-31T01:53:39.548-04:00thank you, now I can again trust medicines to cont...thank you, now I can again trust medicines to contain what they say, don't they use the same methods in those controls?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com