The Day After Tomorrow is a 2004 American science fiction disaster film conceived, co-written, co-produced, and directed by Roland Emmerich, based on the 1999 book The Coming Global Superstorm by Art Bell and Whitley Strieber.
The film depicts catastrophic climatic effects following the disruption of the North Atlantic Ocean circulation, in which a series of extreme weather events usher in climate change and lead to a new ice age.
Now, a new study blows apart “The Day After Tomorrow” climate hoax. Systematic error discovered in ocean current measuring technology. Atlantic current is “remarkably stable.”
The climate loonies have discovered their Atlantic current measurements were all wrong, their models suck, and the current is as strong as ever:
“As greenhouse gas concentrations rise, the AMOC is predicted to decline— or even collapse — in the future. If that occurs, rapid temperature and climate shifts could follow, dramatically affecting everything from agriculture to disease worldwide. But scientists disagree on whether the AMOC is already slowing, and questions remain as to whether a variety of proxy measurements actually indicate a slowdown.
One way to detect AMOC weakening is to monitor the strength of its components such as the Florida Current, which flows swiftly from the Gulf of Mexico into the North Atlantic. The current is a “major contributor” to the AMOC, the researchers write, and a slowdown of the current might indicate a slowdown of the AMOC.
Scientists have been tracking its strength since the 1980s using a submarine cable that measures the volume of water it transports. In the current study, researchers reconsider the data, correcting for a gradual shift in Earth’s magnetic field that they say affected the cable measurements.
Previous assessments of the uncorrected data showed a slight slowing in the Florida Current. But when they corrected for the shift in Earth’s magnetic field, the researchers write, they found that the current “has remained remarkably stable” and not declined significantly over the past 40 years.”
https://washingtonpost.com/science/2024/09/21/florida-current-atlantic-correction-data/