by Glenn A. Hodgkins et al., September 2017 in Journal of Hydrology
Trends in major-floods from 1204 sites in North America and Europe are assessed.
Trends based on counting exceedances of flood thresholds for groups of gauges.
The number of significant trends was about the number expected due to chance alone.
Changes in the frequency of major floods are dominated by multidecadal variability.
See also here
by P. Gosselin, August 29, 2017 in NoTricksZone
Here’s another blow to the global warming alarmist scientists, who have been claiming that the Medieval Warm Period was a local, North Atlantic phenomenon, and did not really exist globally. What follows is a report on yet another paper contradicting this now worn out claim.
See also here
by Ph.D. Roy Spencer, August 29, 2017 in GlobalWarming
As the Houston flood disaster is unfolding, there is considerable debate about whether Hurricane Harvey was influenced by “global warming”. While such an issue matters little to the people of Houston, it does matter for our future infrastructure planning and energy policy.
Let’s review the two basic reasons why the Houston area is experiencing what now looks like a new record amount of total rainfall, at least for a 2-3 day period over an area of tens of thousands of square miles.
La géologie, une science plus que passionnante … et diverse