时间:2024-09-20 08:07:30 来源:网络整理编辑:熱點
There are a lot of theories and counter-theories passed around by climate change deniers in governme
There are a lot of theories and counter-theories passed around by climate change deniers in government in an attempt to explain away the inconvenient truths around climate change.
And this week, a Republican congressman presented quite a doozy of an explanation.
GOP Representative Mo Brooks, who represents Alabama's 5th district, was questioning Philip Duffy, president of the Woods Hole Research Center in Massachusetts during a House Science, Space and Technology Committee hearing this week when he wondered if observed changes in sea levels was somehow caused by rocks and eroding soil and not human-caused climate change.
SEE ALSO:Extreme Arctic heat wave in 2016 wouldn't have happened without climate change"What about erosion?" Brooks asked.
"Every single year that we're on Earth, you have huge tons of silt deposited by the Mississippi River, by the Amazon River, by the Nile... and every time you have that soil or rock or whatever it is that is deposited into the seas, that forces the sea levels to rise, because now you've got less space in those oceans, because the bottom is moving up."
Duffy was nonplussed, answering, "I'm pretty sure that on human timescales, those are minuscule effects."
And the scientific consensus sides with Duffy.
Sophie Nowicki, a Research Scientist and Deputy Chief for the Cryospheric Sciences Laboratory at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, said via email that Brooks doesn't have it right when it comes to his theories on erosion and sea level rise.
"There is an element of land movement and subsidence affecting local sea level," she said. "But the dominant drivers of sea level change come from different sources."
One of those big sources of the increasing sea levels is the accelerated melting of the Greenland Ice Sheet.
Brooks wasn't the only GOP lawmaker to express such skepticism over climate change. But at least he seems to acknowledge that sea levels are rising, even if his theory doesn't hold water on a global level.
Over at the Washington Post, Philip Bump did a little math to see roughly how much soil would have to be deposited in our oceans to account for the annual 3.3 millimeter rise in sea levels. His conclusion: you'd need to drop a big ball of dirt roughly 8 miles in diameter into the oceans every year. And that ain't happening.
As to Brooks' claims, though, Colin Polsky, professor and Director of the Center for Environmental Studies at Florida Atlantic University, said that, "the burden of proof is on the Congressman to persuade us that his idea is superior to the explanation already provided and scientifically vetted by NASA and NOAA."
So far, Brooks hasn't publicly provided that proof, but we've reached out to the congressman's office just in case.
One final note on Brooks: his district includes Huntsville, Alabama which is home to NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. So, if he intends to disagree with NASA's findings, at least he doesn't have to go far.
Here's what 'Game of Thrones' actors get up to between takes2024-09-20 08:05
Netflix is hiding a 'Stranger Things' easter egg on its homepage2024-09-20 07:39
3 women of color sue Uber over gender and race2024-09-20 06:55
Chrissy Teigen accidentally showed her nipple on Snapchat and handled it like a champ2024-09-20 06:37
U.S. pole vaulter skids to a halt for national anthem2024-09-20 06:30
Netflix is hiding a 'Stranger Things' easter egg on its homepage2024-09-20 06:29
Chrissy Teigen accidentally showed her nipple on Snapchat and handled it like a champ2024-09-20 06:17
Latina Equal Pay Day is in November, and that's a problem2024-09-20 06:16
This coloring book is here for all your relationship goals2024-09-20 06:11
British actor turned anti2024-09-20 05:34
Photos show the Blue Cut fire blazing a path of destruction in California2024-09-20 08:04
LinkedIn's Smart Replies predicts how you'll respond to messages2024-09-20 07:20
'Game of Thrones' star Maisie Williams is 'excited' for show to end2024-09-20 07:18
Louis Theroux made a Twitter bet to read out a fake intro, and he stuck to it2024-09-20 07:13
Aly Raisman catches Simone Biles napping on a plane like a champion2024-09-20 06:53
Chrissy Teigen accidentally showed her nipple on Snapchat and handled it like a champ2024-09-20 06:24
Snap lost $40 million on Spectacles2024-09-20 06:21
Here's what it's like to have climate change affect your island home2024-09-20 06:01
Dog elected for third term as mayor of Minnesota town2024-09-20 05:59
Instagram now lets two people share the same live stream2024-09-20 05:41