Bad Science: It turns out that a 200-year-old publication for farmers beats climate-change scientists in predicting this year's harsh winter as the lowly caterpillar beats supercomputers that can't even predict the past. ✧ Last fall, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Climate Prediction Center (CPC) predicted above-normal temperatures from November through January across much of the continental U.S. The Farmers' Almanac, first published in 1818, predicted a bitterly cold, snowy winter. ✧ The Maine-based Farmers' Almanac's still-secret methodology includes variables such as planetary positions, sunspots, lunar cycles and tidal action. It claims an 80% accuracy rate, surely better than those who obsess over fossil fuels and CO2.
Read more at Investors Business Daily (Investors.com)
Sunday, February 23, 2014
IBD: Farmers' Almanac More Reliable Than Warming Climate Models
Labels:
climate change,
Farmer's Almanac,
Global Warming,
NOAA,
prediction,
science
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment