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Do low tides mean that "sea level" is "falling"?
Or have deniers run out of silly deceptions that would not fool a high school student
Sorry guys (first 3 answers), you are taking this rather too literally.
Look two questions below this one (I can't, the denier blocks me):
"Do falling sea levels indicate we are warming?"
The real question here is: how pitiful is the deception and trickery in that other question?
8 Answers
- antarcticiceLv 710 years agoFavorite Answer
I think most here are now fully aware of what Jim is (even some deniers) probably why he now ends his questions so quickly.
Quite obviously sea level has fallen a little, that is to be expected given the cool start to the year, there was a similar effect back in 2008, when those like Jim predicted every thing from a maunder minimum to a new ice age, you would think a geologist would actually know it take to drop into an actual ice age, apparently not.
Of the reverse of that is 1998 or 2005 when sea level rose above the long term trend, if these guys honestly looked at the graphs of the most recent levels then that drop in sea level certainly seems to have stopped and looks to be going back to rising, but they won't.
- 10 years ago
No low tides do not mean the sea level is falling. Low tides have occurred for as long as there has been a moon.
The moon causes low tides when it is on the other side of the world to area that has a low tide. The moons gravity pulls the water towards it.
No one really understands global warming, not even the so called experts. I am currently working a theory that I intend to publish in the next year. For example; The Earth orbits around our sun (called Sol this where the 'Sol'ar System term comes from). Our Solar System orbits around our Galaxy the Milky Way, which in turn rotates around the centre of the universe. Our planet, our solar system and the Galaxy have only travelled roughly twice around the universe (if you are not religious that is). So we as a species are seeing 'New Space' you could say. Who knows what's out there and how it is going to affect our sun and its burning. For example increased Solar Radiation in free space could increase the rate and which our sun burns, therefore making it burn hotter. And giving us the flow on affect of drastically warmer temperatures.
But to answer your question no, low tides do not mean sea level is falling.
Source(s): Current research I am doing, many sources and a little speculation. - davissLv 44 years ago
those are purely my ideas, possibly no longer the genuine meaning in any respect: once you think of of low tide you will possibly envisage unhappy muddy factors of with some shallow swimming pools. Small fish and different sea creatures in those swimming pools have a limited possibility of survival because of the fact they can't come back to sea till the subsequent severe tide and that they may well be lifeless via then. There must be seaweed and rubbish left in the back of via the receding tide, littering the sea coast and making it uninviting. The subject is desolation, possibly loneliness, sadness, dying (the fish), melancholy.
- Anonymous10 years ago
According to denialists, winter means that the Earth is cooling. By their logic, low tides do mean that sea level is falling.
Speaking of the other question you have mentioned, surprise, surprise, Bravozul was picked as best answer.
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- Anonymous10 years ago
no