dedja wrote:Psyber wrote:Global warming is a proven fact.
Unless you're Andrew Bolt or Steve Fielding ...

I should perhaps have said -
"In about a billion years all the water on earth will boil away, purely due to the expansion of the sun".I'm not convinced about anthropogenic warming, as distinct from solar effects and natural cycles..
My recent reading of a book entitled "A History of the Vikings", revealed that most of the colonisation of Iceland, Greenland, and northen America, ocurred during the 10th century AD - earlier than I had thought - and that a major cooling cycle followed so that most of the colonies collapsed by the early 12th century.
Confirming reports come from the history of the Thames freezing.
It appears we are now recovering from a period of "Global Cooling" extending from about 1100 AD to the early 19th century.
From 1400 into the 19th century, there were 24 winters in which the Thames was recorded to have frozen over at London; if "more or less frozen over" years (in parentheses) are included, the number is 26: 1408, 1435, 1506, 1514, 1537, 1565, 1595, 1608, 1621, 1635, 1649, 1655, 1663, 1666, 1677, 1684, 1695, 1709, 1716, 1740, (1768), 1776, (1785), 1788, 1795, and 1814.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_Thames_frost_fairsThe Thames has been frozen over 40 times since 1142 and doubtless countless times before that, although the many narrow piers on the older bridges may have aided freezing as far downstream as London and within the tidal reaches (Teddington, well west of old London, is the tidal head of the river). A recent account of the freezings over is Helen Humphreys, “The Frozen Thames”, 2007, McLelland & Stewart, Toronto, which bases itself on historical accounts related to each of the events.
http://web.mac.com/keithjtinkler/Weathe ... hames.html