Cool.
I hope you learned something from that.
Will you stop sidestepping the larger argument with terminology?
Anomaly means "deviation from normal." The proper way to use it in astronomy terms would to use a defining word before it like orbital, eccentrical, mean, gravitational, etc. The first two charts specifically say "sea ice" before anomaly, not seasonal.
The two chart you replied to was talking about relative changes. Not absolute. The first two charts were not speaking as astronomical anomalies, but the anomaly of numbers.
The next chart I provided shows there is nothing abnormal about the northern sea ice.
Why do you sidestep the point I am making about the southern sea ice being greater than normal for any particular day of the year? That the southern ice isn't dealing with soot like the norther ice is. If the ice was truly melting because of CO2m and temperature, then we should see a similar response with the southern sea ice.
You constantly insult me when it is you who either don't understand what point I am making. Or... maybe you do understand it, and have no valid response, so you resort to the sidestepping.
Are you capable of a proper response to my point?
I know you don't think must of me, but I'll bet PopTech is really being less and less impressed with you now.