The Great Season Climatic Oscillation and the Global Warming
Ahmed Boucenna

TL;DR
This paper challenges the greenhouse effect explanation for global warming, proposing instead that long-term natural climatic oscillations, driven by oceanic and glacial cycles, are the primary factors influencing Earth's climate variations.
Contribution
It introduces the Great Season Climatic Oscillation theory, emphasizing natural long-period oscillations over greenhouse gases as the main driver of climate changes.
Findings
Global warming can be explained by natural climatic oscillations.
The proposed oscillation has a period of 800-1000 years.
Long-term climate variations include four major seasons within a year.
Abstract
The present earth warming up is often explained by the atmosphere gas greenhouse effect. This explanation is in contradiction with the thermodynamics second law. The warming up by greenhouse effect is quite improbable. It is cloud reflection that gives to the earth s ground its 15 degres C mean temperature. Since the reflection of the radiation by gases is negligible, the role of the atmosphere greenhouse gases in the earth warming up by earth radiation reflection loses its importance. We think that natural climatic oscillations contribute more to earth climatic disturbances. The oscillation that we hypothesize to exist has a long period (800 to 1000 years). The glacier melting and regeneration cycles lead to variations in the cold region ocean water density and thermal conductibility according to their salinity. These variations lead one to think about a macro climate oscillating…
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Taxonomy
TopicsClimate variability and models · Atmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics · Meteorological Phenomena and Simulations
