Global Warming: Now Real to Most Americans

The storms keep coming and scorching temperatures are still rising leaving most Americans scratching their heads questioning whether or not all the talk about global warming just might be true. There are more Americans today that believe global warming exists and is causing the recent extreme weather, increased number of deadly illnesses, and rising sea levels.

One recent study conducted by Rasmussen Reports shows most voters (59 percent) now believe in the term “global warming” and that it is a serious problem.

The report comes as the earth continues to sizzle with soaring temperatures and unprecedented drought plaguing most of the nation.

Global warming is one of the most debated issues of modern times, but there are still 37 percent of Americans that still do not think climate change is a serious issue. The scientific community hopes to quickly change their minds.

The findings in the Rasmussen Reports are in stark contrast to Gallup's annual update on Americans' attitudes toward the environment reported in 2010.

Gallup’s poll last year showed that the public was less worried about the threat of global warming, less convinced that its effects are already happening, and more likely to believe that scientists themselves are uncertain about its occurrence.

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About 48 percent of Americans last year believed that the seriousness of global warming has been generally exaggerated.

Although a majority of voters now acknowledge climate change as a serious problem, most of the American public expressed substantial doubt that humans can cause changes in the climate.

However, at the end of last year, a host of reports littered the Internet claiming 2010 was the warmest year ever recorded in history and that 2011 could surpass those temperatures.

Many global warming activists also started using film, photos, and live images showing melting ice caps and glaciers to drive home the point that global warming is already having alarming effects on the earth.

Some of the shifts in Americans' views today reflect real-world events, including the publicity in a recent report conducted by the National Academy of Sciences that revealed 97 out of 100 scientists now believe in man-made climate change.

Many scientists are stepping up the pace to argue that global warming is real and is the ultimate cause of the wretched weather Americans are experiencing today.

Melting Point Of Ice - News


Global Warming: Now Real to Most Americans

Many global warming activists also started using film, photos, and live images showing melting ice caps and glaciers to drive home the point that global warming is already having alarming effects on the earth. Some of the shifts in Americans' views



Govt-MQM ice seems to be melting
Govt-MQM ice seems to be melting

Telephonic talks between President Asif Ali Zardari and MQM chief Altaf Hussain Thursday night were the turning point between the two parties. Besides, PML-Q Chief Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain played a major role in the fresh deal. MQM Chief Altaf Hussain,



Springfield native helping flood victims in Midwest

Compounding the problem was the melting of an estimated 212 percent of normal snow pack from the Rocky Mountains that starts around April and has continued into July. The Missouri had spread out and up and over its banks, beyond its bluffs.



When Antarctica was a tropical paradise
When Antarctica was a tropical paradise

"By the time we get to 500ppm we will start to see major melting of the ice caps." Measurements taken by Henk Brinkhus and Peter Bijl of Utrecht University as part of the International Ocean Drilling Programme were revealed at the symposium.



Long-Term Frozen Assets

As the president and CEO of a small company (at its summer peak, Bassetts employs only about 20), Michael is where the buck stops in any crisis, which, in his business, usually involves melting ice cream. The company's modest '70s-era paneled office on




The Shamanic Economist: Arctic Sea Ice in Record-Breaking Decline

After a spring season of near-record ice melt in the Arctic Ocean, the Arctic ice extent map has moved into record territory again this month. Ice extent is declining several days ahead of the previous record season of 2007, and six weeks ahead of the long-term average. Arctic ice melt in recent years has been very much affected by the weather, but not so this year — major swings in the Arctic weather patterns have barely perturbed the extent graph’s downward trend. The graph is smoother than in a typical year. Statistically, a smooth graph may be the result of many small, independent effects, and that may be what is going on with the Arctic ice, which is thinner than ever before seen and has broken into small pieces, a pattern we are not used to seeing.

The current weather pattern is one that historically is not so favorable for ice melt, but instead is associated with an unusually high flow of ice from the Arctic Ocean into the Atlantic Ocean along both coasts of Greenland. In spite of that, the map seems to show continued rapid melt and not so much ice flowing out. Perhaps with the unusually thin ice, much of it is melting before it reaches the area of Greenland. With the ice broken in smaller pieces, perhaps there is nothing to clog up the flow of ice, so that it no longer matters which way the wind blows. Or with so much open water between the ice, the water is absorbing more sunlight and may already be warm enough to make the week-to-week weather fluctuations irrelevant.

But if the ice melt is no longer responding to the weather, then there is nothing to stop a new record low ice extent from occurring, conceivably as early as four weeks from now. If the melt were to continue on the straight line of the last two weeks, all the ice would melt away before the sun went away in September. Realistically, the melt will slow down at some point, but the warmer the ocean becomes, the later that will occur. With more surface water exposed to the sun than in any previous July, the Arctic Ocean must be warming faster than in any previous July. The current conditions, with thin, free-flowing ice covering such a small area this early in the season, have never before been observed, so we don’t know what might happen.


Melting Point Of Ice - Bookshelf

Bulletin

Bulletin

EFFECTS OF TEMPERATURE AT THE MELTING POINT OF ICE ON THE TISSUES Beginning with the first problem — stems and parts of stems of Opuntia castillae, ...

Nature

Nature

The temperature is now below the boiling-point, and liquefaction instantly sets in and rapidly spreads, the ice consuming its own heat in the process. ...

General physics and its application to industry and everyday life

General physics and its application to industry and everyday life

Suppose two pieces of ice are forced together. At the points of contact the pressure is so great that at these points the melting point of the ice is ...

Chemistry For Dummies

Chemistry For Dummies

The melting point for ice is 32 degrees Fahrenheit, or 0 degrees Celsius. If you watch the temperature of ice as it melts, you see that the temperature ...

Report of the annual meeting

Report of the annual meeting

On tlie Plasticity of Ice. By James Thomson, CE SfC. ... namely, that the freezing-point of water, or the melting-point of ice, must vary with the pressure ...

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Melting point - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The melting point of a solid is the temperature at which it changes state from solid to liquid. At the melting point the solid and liquid phase exist in equilibrium. ...

melting point: Definition from Answers.com
melting point n. ( Abbr. mp ) The temperature at which a solid becomes a liquid at standard atmospheric pressure ... The melting point of solid water (ice) is 32°F (0°C) ...

Melting Snow & Ice with Salt
Learn how you can use freezing point depression it melt snow and ice with salt and prevent it from re-freezing.

Melting - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Melting, or fusion, is a physical process that results in the phase change of a ... From a thermodynamics point of view, at the melting point the change in Gibbs free energy ...

Melting Point of Water
What is the Melting Point of Ice? Here is an e-mail we sent to a chemistry lecturer in the US trying to find out the answer to this question. Here is his reply. Back to 6B ...