Temperature could be related to the big heater thingy in the sky? Nah… Continue reading
Tag Archives: solar influence
AGU: Link found between cold European winters and solar activity
Posted in Climate Change
Tagged climate research, solar effects, solar influence, solar-climate nexus
Dennis T. Avery: My Second-Most-Remarkable Moment
I had my second-most-remarkable moment while at the Heartland climate skeptics’ conference in Chicago last week. The conference was terrific, for climate scientists, geologists, economists, NASA engineers, and interested attendees. The highlight for me, though, was Sebastian Lunning, who co-authored Germany’s best-selling new book The Cold Sun: Why the Climate Catastrophe Won’t Happen. Continue reading
Posted in Climate Change
Tagged solar activity, solar effects, solar influence, solar-climate nexus
Hockey Schtick: New paper finds Sun caused abrupt climate change 2,800 years ago
A paper recently published in Nature Geoscience finds that large changes in solar UV radiation induced amplified effects upon climate and abrupt climate change via the atmospheric circulation. Continue reading
Posted in Climate Change
Tagged climate research, solar effects, solar influence, solar-climate nexus
Hockey Schtick: New paper confirms Little Ice Age was a global phenomenon, related to solar activity
A paper published today in Geophysical Research Letters confirms that “the Little Ice Age was a global event, probably caused by a change in solar [activity] and volcanic forcing [activity].” Continue reading
Posted in Climate Change
Tagged climate research, climate science, solar influence, solar-climate nexus
Geologist explains how the Sun and water vapor control climate, not CO2
The IPCC claims that man-made CO2 [less than 5% of CO2 emissions; 95% are natural] drives the water cycle to cause enhanced warming of the Earth. Continue reading
Posted in Climate Change
Tagged climate models, climate research, solar influence, Veizer
Svensmark: Evidence continues to build that the Sun drives climate, not CO2
In his lecture at the recent EIKE Climate and Energy Conference, Professor Henrik Svensmark explains how the evidence continues to accumulate that solar activity is the primary driver of climate, on timescales ranging from hours to millions of years. Continue reading


