Author Archives: fhhaynie

                             Nature’s Net-zero

                                                          Introduction Complex models of atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration, that involve more than four or five parameters, are relatively useless in either hind-casting or predicting regardless of how well they may fit available data. So it is better to work … Continue reading

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Natural Emissions of CO2

Introduction The quantity of natural emissions of CO2 into the atmosphere as used in existing models is no better than an educated guess. It is mistakenly assumed to be balanced out by natural sinks to show that burning fossil fuel … Continue reading

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Quantifying the Atmospheric Flux of Natural CO2 from Source to Sink

Introduction The quantity of natural emissions of CO2 into the atmosphere as used in existing models is no better than an educated guess. It is mistakenly assumed to be balanced out by natural sinks to show that burning fossil fuel … Continue reading

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What Does The Arctic Tell Us About Climate Change?

    Measured atmospheric CO2 data is probably our most accurate indicator of climate change, but not a significant cause(or forcing factor). Scripps and NOAA operate several monitoring sites in the Arctic. All these sites north of 60 degrees measure CO2 … Continue reading

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Quantifying the Anthropogenic Contribution to the Global Background Level of Atmospheric CO2

Revised 2/22/15. All the data I have analyzed are evidence that reported monthly averages are measurements of a global distribution of background levels of CO2. Event flask measurements that were exceptionally high (that could be from local anthropogenic sources) have … Continue reading

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Hello world!

Welcome to my blog on climate change. I have been analyzing climate data for several years trying to determine how much the burning of fossil fuel contributes to observed environmental changes that we call climate. I will post the results of … Continue reading

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