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In The Wall Street Journal opinions section, a group of 16 scientists, including former professors and chiefs of several atmospheric research institutes, have argued boldly that global warming is no cause for panic, claiming that the mean temperature of the Earth has not changed for more than a decade.
FORBES: Global Warming Is No Threat?
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Since then, the concentration of carbon dioxide has in fact increased and the mean temperature of the surface of the earth has increased in pretty much the way Dr. Arrhenius said it would.
FORBES: NASA Data Pit Scientific Method Against Climate Astrology
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Arrhenius predicted that if the carbon dioxide concentration increased, the mean temperature of the surface of the earth would increase, in pretty much the way he said it would.
FORBES: NASA Data Pit Scientific Method Against Climate Astrology
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That is only a twentieth of the mean distance between the Earth and the Sun.
BBC: By BBC News Online Science Editor Dr David Whitehouse
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This would mean that 4 billion years ago, the age of the earliest signs of life on earth, interstellar distances were much smaller.
ECONOMIST: Panspermia: Interplanetary migration | The
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NPR's Christopher Joyce talked to scientists who say this could mean that in the 100 years the Earth will have some totally new kinds of climates.
NPR: Warming Will Create Micro-Climates, Scientists Say
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It could mean they gain control of the spacecraft systems and can fire the engines, but after the orbit around Earth has dropped so low that there is not enough fuel to go to Phobos.
MSN: Salvaging Science from Stricken Mars Moon Probe: A Scientist's View - Technology & science - Space - Space.com | NBC News
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However the results of the investigation conducted at the end of 2008 reveal that vast majority of the Earth scientists surveyed agree that in the past 200-plus years, mean global temperatures have been rising and that human activity is a significant contributing factor in changing mean global temperatures.
CNN: Surveyed scientists agree global warming is real
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The moors that winter were often under a crust of snow not enough to blanket them in white, but a mean, dirty frosting on the hard earth and wilted shrubs.
NEWYORKER: She��s the One