The Climate Clock

  • HOME
  • GALLERY
  • LIBRARY
  • TUTORIALS
  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT
  • KRONIKKER

Category: Solar system

Solar system dynamics

Lunar forced CO2 variations (1820-2020)

  • Harald Yndestad
  • 26/12/2022
  • Global sea
Atmospheric CO2 variations from 1820-2020 are controlled by global sea surface temperature variations and the lunar nodal tide. The identified lunar nodal tide spectrum in CO2 variations...
Read More

Havet puster CO2

  • Harald Yndestad
  • 02/12/2022
  • Global sea
“Vitenskapens store tragedie: å drepe en vakker hypotese, med et stygt faktum.”  — Thomas Huxley (1825-1895). Der hadde vært en rådende oppfatning, om en direkte...
Read More
sola-driven climate

Solen varierer over 4450 år

  • Harald Yndestad
  • 24/10/2022
  • Sun
Solens rotasjon rundt solsystemets barysentre, solens indre dynamo og stråling fra solens overflate
Read More
sola-driven climate

Sol-drevet klimaendringer

  • Harald Yndestad
  • 05/10/2022
  • Sun
Solsystemet
Read More

Lunar-drevet klimaendring

  • Harald Yndestad
  • 15/09/2022
  • Global sea
Månen innflytelse på klimaendringer er betydelig undervurdert. Vi finner signaturen til månen over alt i naturen. Fra endringer i jordrotasjonen, til forvalting av havressurser. I...
Read More

Becks´ siste manuskript

  • Harald Yndestad
  • 29/08/2022
  • Global sea
Våren 2011 lå der en pakke i postkassen. Frimerkene fortalte meg at pakken kom fra Tyskland. Det var en pakke med vitenskapelige artikler, en CD...
Read More

The Greenland Climate Clock

  • Harald Yndestad
  • 13/07/2022
  • Arctic
Greenland temperature (GISP2) variability is controlled by lunar nodal cycle periods of (1, 4, 8, 16, 24)18.6 years and solar forced periods of (166, 333…4450)...
Read More

Galileo´s teleskop

  • Harald Yndestad
  • 08/07/2022
  • Moon
Galileo rettet sitt teleskop, mot Jupiters måner. Jupiters måner var i bevegelse. De viste at ikke alt i universet, dreier seg rundt jorden. I bakgrunnen...
Read More

Ny kald klimaperiode

  • Harald Yndestad
  • 25/06/2022
  • Jovian planets
Naturlige klimaendringer er et resultat av interferens mellom periodiske endringer i solsystemet. Etter en varm klima periode, kommer der uvegerlig en ny kald klima periode....
Read More

The Earth’s Climate Variability

  • Harald Yndestad
  • 28/04/2022
  • Earth
Upcoming climate variations have a computed modern temperature maximum at the year 2025 and a computed deep minimum at the year 2070. Interference between solar-...
Read More

The Ice Age Climate Machine

  • Harald Yndestad
  • 04/04/2022
  • Arctic
In 1911, the Serb Milutin Milankovitch sat down with friends and celebrated that a mutual friend had published his first collection of poems. Over a...
Read More

The Mauna Loa CO2 Signature

  • Harald Yndestad
  • 17/01/2022
  • Earth
The Mauna Loa, Hawaii CO2 data series cover the period 1958-2020, which is the longest continuous record of direct atmospheric CO2 measurements. Data are recorded...
Read More

Posts navigation

1 2 3 Next

About Climate Clock

The Climate Clock is on-line blog.

The Climate Clock presents stationary periods in climate variability.

The Climate Clock presents a chain of events from planets oscillations to eco system oscillations.

The Climate Clock Project

The Climate Clock Research Project started in 1995 to study the lunar tide influence on cod biomass variability in the Barents Sea. The research continued to study solar and climate variability.

The blog is under construction.

Gallery

The Solar system
Lunar driven marine eco-system
Ålesund

Get in Touch

Editor: Harald Yndestad

Address: Snopenesvegen 23. 6017. Ålesund. Norway.

Email: haraldyndestad@mac.com

Phone: +47 93239261

Copyright © All Rights Reserved.
  • HOME
  • GALLERY
  • LIBRARY
  • TUTORIALS
  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT
  • KRONIKKER