Identifying Global Warming Snow And Global Cooling Snow

Heavy snow during the 1970s was caused by global cooling, but equally heavy snow in recent years is caused by global warming.

Global warming snow can be differentiated from global cooling snow, based on the current funding scam of the climate seance community.

ScreenHunter_82 Feb. 18 17.57

 

Rutgers University Climate Lab :: Global Snow Lab

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20 Responses to Identifying Global Warming Snow And Global Cooling Snow

  1. Andy DC says:

    The global cooling snows in the 1970’s were nice gentle snows compared to these nasty global warming snows that we now get.

  2. DaBuh says:

    In the Northern Hemisphere, snow coverage this past December was the greatest since records began in 1966, Rutgers University’s Global Snow Lab reported. But Dr. David Robinson, a climatologist at Rutgers, warns that year-to-year fluctuations and regional differences can deceive casual observers. In general, he says, there has been an “overall decline in snowfall.”
    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/27/opinion/sunday/enjoying-snow-while-we-still-have-it.html?_r=3&

  3. sunsettommy says:

    Meteorologist Dominik Jung Turns Skeptical After Germany Sets Record 5 Consecutive Colder-Than-Normal Winters!

    http://notrickszone.com/2013/02/17/meteorologist-dominik-jung-turns-skeptical-after-germany-sets-record-5-consecutive-colder-than-normal-winters/

  4. Andy OZ says:

    It’s easy to tell the difference by the colour.
    Cooling snow is pure white. Warming snow is the off white/cream/bone coloured snow. (sarc)
    Like Richie Benauds jackets.

  5. TomC says:

    Meanwhile, in Ojmjakon they have yet to see -40°C this month.
    http://www.wunderground.com/history/station/24688/2013/2/19/MonthlyHistory.html

  6. jameshrust says:

    As a graduate student at M. I. T. from September 1958-June 1960 I lived through two snow storms. The first in February 1959 left my car buried in the graduate student parking lot with snow so deep I could only see the top of the car aerial. It took about three weeks for the snow to melt. The second time was in January 1960 when my car was “plowed” by snow plows on the parkway in front of the Institute graduate dorm for another three weeks.
    James Rust

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