Introduction
 Theses
 Cooling Europe 1939
 Climate down 1939-42
    Introduction
    Arctic by occupation
    Baltic battle field
    Cold axis 1941-42
    Stockholm's record
    Baltic Sea icing
    Three-year-package
 Sea War turn climate
 Big Warming 1918
 Climate change twice
   References
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Climate down 1939 – 42 (3)

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Introduction

The winter of 1940/41 was cold everywhere in North Europe, but record temperatures were recorded in South Norway, Arctic by occupation (3_11), due to fighting in Norway’s coastal waters when it was invaded in 1940.

The third war winter 1941/42 started when ‘Barbarossa’, the German attack on Russia, made the Baltic a battle field (3_21), resulting six month later in extreme Baltic Sea icing (3_24) conditions.

From London to Sweden an arctic winter governed along a Cold axis (3_22) demonstrated by Stockholm’s record (3_23) that that were winter conditions which had little in common with ‘natural variations’, but were massively anthropogenic in cause.

An assessment of the war winter from 1939 until 1942 as a Three-years-package (3_31), proves that this has its cause in the war at sea activities

order this book:

Trafford on demand publishing service, Canada/UK
ISBN 1-4120-4946-6


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