Ileana

So I’m now fully prepared to look stupid. This morning’s front page of the newspaper included a short story by me about the rains finally shutting down. Umm. Hold that thought. Hurricane Ileana is changing the picture in a hurry, with the possibility of a big slug of moisture come the weekend: AT LEAST SOME …

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The “Left” Does It Too

One of my arguments against Chris Mooney’s thesis (“The Republican War on Science“) is that all disputants in scientized political debates cherrypick. Chris has argued from the specific – Well-documented examples in which conservatives have done this. – to the general – The problem is that conservatives do this. My view is that we have …

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Water in the Desert

jones_arroyo Originally uploaded by heinemanfleck. Another sight from Saturday’s bike ride: This is the Jones arroyo (and by “arroyo,” I mean “concrete channel”) that Coco wrote about last week. If you click through to the big version of the picture, you can see where they whacked out the bridge’s concrete sidewalls to let the water …

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More Stuff I Wrote Elsewhere

On our summer monsoon Winter droughts apparently bring summer rains in New Mexico. That, dumb luck and a bit of mystery are scientists’ best explanations for this year’s prodigious monsoon, which looks like one for the record books. “We’re on track for our wettest summer ever,” said Charlie Liles, head of the National Weather Service’s …

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Santa Ana Winds and Climate Change

Last February, Kit Stolz blogged about evidence that California’s fire-bringing Santa Ana winds (SAO is the acronymic jargon) were shifting later in the year. There’s a new paper in GRL suggesting a link between climate change and the shift: This initial analysis shows consistent shifts in SAO events from earlier (September–October) to later (November–December) in …

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