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09/09/15 10:22 PM

#237598 RE: conix #237596

conix -- so you found yet another idiot to tout -- what a shock

(linked in) http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=103588995 and preceding and following

arizona1

09/09/15 10:25 PM

#237599 RE: conix #237596

Ah, so along with every other wingnut talking point....you also don't believe in climate change? You're not only transparent but embarrassing.

SoxFan

09/09/15 10:28 PM

#237601 RE: conix #237596

do you believe what you just posted?

arizona1

09/09/15 10:36 PM

#237603 RE: conix #237596

SoxFan

09/09/15 10:47 PM

#237606 RE: conix #237596

Hey get educated as it appears you will swallow anything if it agrees with you vapid notions and weird views of the world. As you have shown us to have about as much understanding on issues as the depth of a cookie sheet I post this for your humiliation. I know this is long and over your head but try. LOL

This site is where your pretty picture came from -

http://nsidc.org/arcticseaicenews/

Average sea ice extent for August 2015 was 5.61 million square kilometers (2.16 million square miles), the fourth lowest August extent in the satellite record. This is 1.61 million square kilometers (621,000 square miles) below the 1981 to 2010 average for the month, and 900,000 square kilometers (350,000 square miles) above the record low for August, set in 2012.

The rapid pace of daily ice loss seen in late July 2015 slowed somewhat in August. The pace increased slightly toward the end of the month, so that by August 31 Arctic sea ice extent was only slightly greater than on the same date in 2007 and 2011. The ice is currently tracking lower than two standard deviations below the 1981 to 2010 long-term average.

Sea ice extent remains below average in nearly every sector except for Baffin Bay and Hudson Bay, where some ice persists in sheltered coastal areas. A striking feature of the late 2015 melt season are the extensive regions of low-concentration ice (less than 70% ice cover) in the Beaufort Sea. A few patches of multi-year sea ice surrounded by open water remain in the central Beaufort Sea.


NOTICE YOUR PICTURE MUST HAVE BEEN ALTERED TO COINCIDE WITH YOUR VIEWS