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Red doesn't mean hot - it's temps above the average.If you want to analyse the 160 years of raw data for yourself, maybe write to the Prof who calculated the graphs https://www.climate-lab-book.ac.uk/2018/warming-stripes/
Quote from: Belker on July 16, 2022, 01:23:05 pmQuote from: Horse on July 16, 2022, 12:43:20 pmFor once I was wrong kenHorse admits Defeat !Gotta be something wrong here ?Horse never admits Defeat regardless of how defeated he is ??Quote from: Horse on July 16, 2022, 01:40:57 pmI ain't admitting nutin Ken. I may have slightly underestimated the effectiveness of a tower fan. Slightly.Horse, now beaten, bloodied eyed and on his back on the canvas after admitting defeat and saying the dreaded words; "I was wrong" which only the totally defeated would ever say. His champion aggressor Ken offers Horse a hand to lift himself to his feet and sez to him trying to play down his total demoralisation of his opponent; "Ah, sure de fans aren't as good as a birra breeze in the back garden".Horse accepts his loss, he knows that he has been beaten by the better man !
Quote from: Horse on July 16, 2022, 12:43:20 pmFor once I was wrong kenHorse admits Defeat !Gotta be something wrong here ?Horse never admits Defeat regardless of how defeated he is ??
For once I was wrong ken
I ain't admitting nutin Ken. I may have slightly underestimated the effectiveness of a tower fan. Slightly.
Ken gets booted back in to his corner.
The highest temperature ever recorded in Ireland was 33.3 °C at Kilkenny Castle, on 26 June 1887.Now what was the excuse for that ?It couldn't have been the 21 century made up name of global warming , maybe it was all the sparks from swords bating off each other that caused daddy nature to heat the planet up , personally I think Gretta and her merry men haven't a clue what their on about it's all a load of bollix
The highest currently recognised air temperature (33.3 °C) ever recorded in the Republic of Ireland was logged at Kilkenny Castle in 1887. The original observational record however no longer exists. Given that Ireland is now the only country in Europe to have a national heat record set in the 19th century, a reassessment of the verity of this record is both timely and valuable. <snip> We argue that the Met Éireann recognised 20th Century heat record from Boora in 1976 verifies as the most plausible robust national temperature record based upon the synoptic situation and comparisons with nearby neighbouring stations. This measurement of 32.5 °C thus likely constitutes the highest reliably recorded temperature measurement in the Republic of Ireland.
So ifin it twas 33.3c in 1887 who was mouthing about climate warming then?
Quote from: Cool Boola on July 19, 2022, 11:24:54 amSo ifin it twas 33.3c in 1887 who was mouthing about climate warming then?https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eunice_Newton_Foote#:~:text=Scientists%20and%20journalists%20generally%20concur,discovery%20of%20the%20greenhouse%20effect.Then a guy called Tyndall (I think)