Thomas Jefferson witnessed global warming as noted by Newsmax:
Climate change crusaders insist that the earth is warming largely due to the emission of greenhouse gases by motor vehicles and factories.
But Thomas Jefferson wrote about global warming back in the early 19th century, before there were any emissions from cars, coal-fired power plants, and other developments of the Industrial Age.
In a letter to Philadelphia physician and professor Nathaniel Chapman dated Dec. 11, 1809, nine months after he left the presidency, Jefferson wrote: “The change which has taken place in our climate is one of those facts which all men of years are sensible of and yet none can prove by regular evidence. They can only appeal to each other’s general observation for the fact.
“I remember that when I was a small boy, say sixty years ago, snows were frequent and deep in every winter, to my knee very often, to my waist sometimes, and that they covered the earth long. And I remember while yet young to have heard from very old men that in their youth the winters had been still colder, with deeper and longer snows. In the year 1772, thirty-seven years ago, we had a snow two feet deep in the Champain parts of this state, and three feet in the counties next below the mountains . . .
“While I lived at Washington, I kept a Diary, and by recurring to that I observe that from the winter of 1802-03 to that of 1808-09 inclusive, the average fall of snow of the seven winters was only 14½ inches, and that the ground was covered but sixteen days in each winter on average of the whole. The maximum in any one winter during that period was 21 inches fall, and 34 days on the ground, the minimum was 4½ inches fall and two days on the ground . . .
“Williams in his history of Vermont has an essay on the change in the climate of Europe, Asia and Africa.”
It’s clear, then, that the earth was warming during Jefferson’s time. It’s also clear that the climate change could not be attributed to man’s activities.
Source: http://webmailb.netzero.net/webmail/new/7?session_redirect=true&userinfo=20aa7a3dc9bc58b82210ae3ff96c1128&count=1267998080
3 comments:
Jefferson also said: "I would more easily believe a Yankee professor would like than stone would fall from the Heavens." (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meteoroid#History)
Perhaps as great as he was, he is not the foremost scientific expert.
To matts2
And character assassination is a good scientific practice is it?
What Jefferson believed in is irrelevant.
What matters is the quality of his observations. Unless you have evidence to suggest Jefferson was lying or was erring in the way he kept his records, you Sir, are more unscientific than him.
As the mini-ice age was ending during the time of writings, in all probability, his observations are immaculate.
Wow. I didn't know that. Interesting stuff. I live in Thomas Jefferson's Virginia and the natives who have lived here for 50 years say the same thing..there was snow on the ground much more often then there is now. I have to wonder if the changes are cyclical.
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