To: Brumar89 who wrote (961373 ) 9/4/2016 2:02:01 PM From: Brumar89 Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1575781 September 3 During The Ice Age Scare Posted on September 3, 2016 by tonyheller On this date in 1974, the US was very cold, with temperatures below 50F as far south as Texas, and much of the US below freezing. Minimum temperatures were 15 degrees cooler than the same date in 1898. A few weeks earlier, Time Magazine warned of another ice age, and said that the world had cooled 2.7 degrees since the 1940’s TIME Magazine Archive Article — Another Ice Age? — Jun. 24, 1974 Compare cold 1974 temperatures vs. hot 1947 temperatures for reference NCAR and The National Academy of Sciences reported the warm 1940’s and subsequent cooling. 14 Jul 1974, Page 1 – Lincoln Evening Journal at Newspapers.com Science News March 1, 1975 The 1940’s warmth and 1970’s ice age scare wrecked NASA’s climate agenda, so they erased it – with the help of unwitting dupes like Steven Mosher.Gail Combs says: September 3, 2016 at 3:36 pm The Global Cooling Scare Revisited (‘Ice Age’ Holdren had plenty of company) NASA Scientists Predicted a New Ice Age in 1971 Nigel Calder Predictions Revisited — Prophet of the Next Ice Age …Those who rewrite the history of climate science to suit the man-made global warming hypothesis hate to be reminded that global cooling and the threat of a new ice age rang alarm bells in the 1960s and 1970s. In the Orwellian manner they try to airbrush out the distinguished experts involved, and to say it was just a scare story dreamed up by stupid reporters like me. No, we didn’t make it up. I was present in Rome in 1961 when global cooling was already the main concern at a conference of the World Meteorological Organization and Unesco (see the Unesco reference). The discussions were led by Hubert Lamb of the UK Met Office, who went on to found the Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia. A persistent concern of Lamb and others was that the world might return to a Little Ice Age like that of 300 years ago . But the improving knowledge of glacial history, and especially the apparent brevity of warm interglacials, prompted anxiety about a full-blown ice age. George Kukla, together with Robert Matthews of Brown University, convened a conference in 1972 entitled “The Present Interglacial: How and When will it End?”, and reported it in Science magazine. Kukla and Matthews alerted President Richard Nixon, and as a result the US Administration set up a Panel on the Present Interglacial involving the State Department and other agencies. None of us knew then that the mid-century cooling was about to be punctuated by a warming spell from the late 1970s to the mid 1990s.//