> There's more ice at the Arctic, Greenland, and Antarctica today than just 2 years ago. What happened to "global

There's more ice at the Arctic, Greenland, and Antarctica today than just 2 years ago. What happened to "global

Posted at: 2015-03-12 
If the trend continues, we will have a planet covered with ice eventually but it isn't likely to continue that long of course.

Not true. The Antarctic and Greenland ice caps are continuing to shrink. There has been an increase in sea ice, which may be a blip, or which may be due to decreased salinity due to fresh-water run off from the ice caps.

Well I didn't believe that the melting ice was due to man-made warming in the first place, so I am not surprised, but slightly concerned, I mean warmer is better, we do not want global cooling.

I haven't examined the latest summer minimum data yet but 2 years ago was one of the lowest summer minimum's on record.

People like you are the reason that it's legally required to put net weight on food packaging and there's still a large market for people who design deceptive packaging.

2 years? Haven't you heard of trend and variation?

http://www.climatecentral.org/blogs/scie...

Not that I expect you to appreciate the difference but volume and area are two different things. Two studies in Antarctica independently concluded that the ice shelf is getting thinner as it is melted from the bottom. In terms of volume, which is the important measurement, there is less ice now.

You swallow lies like it was mother's milk

http://www.nasa.gov/press/2014/september...



No this proves two things, there is global cooling and you don't know the difference between "then" and "than"

2 years is not climate. Both have long trends down.

So-called "global warming" was supposed to melt all the ice on the poles and on Greenland too, however this isn't happening. Today there's more ice at these places then there was just 2 years ago. Does this refute the theory that so-called "global warming" is causing all the ice to melt? If this trend continues, will we have another ice age?