OldBlackDog
Well-Known Member
You are funny. Man damned the river.
You cannot get past that.
There is water if you let it out.
Man has screwed around with the river for years.
Deal with that before, you go with the pie in the sky that man is responsible for global warming.
You cannot get past that.
There is water if you let it out.
Man has screwed around with the river for years.
Deal with that before, you go with the pie in the sky that man is responsible for global warming.
Then how do you explain this.....
The mean annual area of snow cover in Canada has declined by 5.1% from 1972 to 2010 (Chart 1).9
http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/16-002-x/16-002-x2012001-eng.pdf
Got an explanation for this?
Across southern Canada (the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence, the Prairies and the South British Columbia Mountains climatic regions) and the west coast (Pacific Coast climatic region), the mean temperature departure trend increased between 0.9 C and 1.7 C over the study period.
http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/16-002-x/16-002-x2011001-eng.pdf
We need snow in the winter so that it melts slowly and can supply water through the dry summer until the fall rains come. This is not happening as this data suggests.
Over the study period, the Pacific Coast (-7 percentage points), and South British Columbia Mountains (-18 percentage points) climatic regions experienced decreased precipitation during winter, but data show increased precipitation during spring (+24 percentage points) and fall (+17 percentage points) in the South British Columbia Mountains and during spring (+19 percentage points) and summer (+7 percentage points) in the Pacific Coast as compared to the normal period. The results did not show a significant trend for fall precipitation in the Pacific Coast and summer precipitation in the South British Columbia Mountains.
http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/16-002-x/16-002-x2011003-eng.pdf