Seriously, what the hell is it with all this cold. I'm pretty sick of it. I'm ready to change my mind and become pro-AGW.
Calgary finally had a couple of warm days. No worries, just wait for Wednesday when the high will be 26°F and low 15°F. These are cooler than normal for late February in Calgary, eh?
Jem may be too busy to give you the link you are after, so it is with great pleasure that I now supply you with the requested link to "...the peer reviewed paper showing that evolution is true." Here is your "link': This is Leslie Orgel's famous paper proving evolution. With R. Saffhill, H. Schneider-Bernloehr, and S. Spiegelman. In vitro selection of bacteriophage Qß ribonucleic acid variants resistant to ethidium bromide. J. Mol. Biol. 51:531–539 You'll be disappointed, as was I, to learn that the brilliant Orgel was not awarded the Nobel Prize which he so richly deserved. See also Orgel's rules of evolution. And this Biography: http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=10&ved=0CFEQFjAJ&url=http://www.nasonline.org/publications/biographical-memoirs/memoir-pdfs/orgel-leslie-e.pdf&ei=btrrVL_PFYi-ggSV2YOoCQ&usg=AFQjCNFNMM4xka5Vs9zaOydUtRdTzBb82w&bvm=bv.86475890,d.eXY Start reading on Pg. 11 and continue through Pg. 19 which will describe what you are after. On page 9 of Orgel's biography there is a picture of four very famous and universally revered chemists. Each of these men possesses more intelligence in a single neuron then you possess in your entire brain, such as is is. ___________________ Orgel was nominated for the Nobel Prize at least once that I am aware of, and it is quite possible, very likely in fact, that he was nominated several times. He was the inspiration behind others whose work did gain them the prize.
As far as global warming goes, it does not matter what any city's temperature will be tomorrow, only what it was today.
That's a pretty stupid thing to say. No way one of their neurons possesses more intelligence than my entire brain. Such as it is. Besides, you have no science.
The ocean’s “unprecedented” surge: East Coast sea levels rose 5 inches in 2 years Temporary spikes in sea level rise may become more common with global warming, a new study finds