Earth's Temperature at Highest Levels in 400 Years 1044
thatguywhoiam writes "Congress asked, and the scientists have answered: 'The Earth is the hottest it has been in at least 400 years, probably even longer. The
National Academy of Sciences, reaching that conclusion in a broad review of scientific work requested by Congress, reported Thursday that the 'recent warmth is unprecedented for at least the last 400 years and potentially the last several millennia.'"
Warmer than... (Score:5, Informative)
I'll bet it's warmer than it was 10,000 years ago [thinkquest.org], too.
Re:To: Mr. George W. Bush (Score:3, Informative)
This is entirely correct. Bush has admitted that global warming exists (and that Iraqi WMDs don't, ho ho ho) but AFAICR (can recall) he doesn't admit a human influence and he doesn't believe that measures need to be taken by humans to prevent continued global warming.
I just want to know if it's true that we're delaying an ice age with global warming. Maybe I'll be a proponent of greenhouse gases :)
Re:What caused the warming 400 years ago? (Score:5, Informative)
They said it was unprecedented within the last 400 years, at least. That's not the same thing.
Re:This just in . . . (Score:4, Informative)
"Millions of years ago, the Earth was a great, molten mass, called Pangaea."
Re:CNN had a different figure (Score:2, Informative)
Unprecedented? No. (Score:4, Informative)
Unprecedented high temperatures in recent history, perhaps. Unprecedented in terms of Earth's history? I'm afraid not. [daviesand.com] Notice the three sharp spikes occurring at roughly 130,000 year intervals. We started such a rise about 15,000 years ago, right at the expected time if the pattern repeats, but something levelled it off around present-day levels and has kept it there for the last 10,000 years. Whatever cause the levelling-out it wasn't humans, we weren't doing anything on a scale large enough to cause global effects 15,000 years back. If whatever it is stops, I'd expect global temperatures to spike by another 2-3 degrees C, then drop sharply to 4-6 degrees C below "normal".
Re:To: Mr. George W. Bush (Score:2, Informative)
"...researchers said they were highly confident the mean global surface temperature was higher in the past 25 years than any comparable period during the previous four centuries.
They had less confidence the past quarter-century was hotter than any comparable period in the years from 900 to 1600, but found that plausible. For the years before 900, the scientists said they had very little confidence about what the Earth's mean surface temperatures were."
It seems to me like the scientists are sticking with what they can prove demonstrate beyond reasonable doubt (temperatures from 1600). If they claimed that we had the hottest temperatures since the 1000s then people with an agenda would pounce on their "unreliable" data and attempt to obfuscate the whole issue.
Re:So... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:What caused the warming 400 years ago? (Score:5, Informative)
1. It wasn't this hot 400 years ago... we only have 400 years of reliable temperature data.
2. From the fucking article...
Re:To: Mr. George W. Bush (Score:4, Informative)
Scientists have proven that carbon dioxide emissions from human actions have caused the temperature of the Earth to increase. They have collected evidence which demonstrates this within the margins they find to be acceptable as proof.
Having proven it to other scientists, it is not their responsibility to now come to your house and prove it to you according to your rules, nor are they obligated to sponsor a cartoon version for your consumption. Every scientist who has studied this topic, and does not work directly for an oil company, has come to the same conclusion. There is more debate among experts about the validity of the proof of the Poincare conjecture than there is about the evidence for global warming.
However, I do not suspect that you will be persuaded by this. You will endlessly try to debate and complain about this, and you will simultaneously avoid actually studying the facts or researching more information.
You are ignorant by choice, and I hope you get full blown aids or melanoma.
Signed,
Another Guy
Reading the actual report is better than Yahoo (Score:4, Informative)
Now, notice something: we're talking about a "warming trend" over the last 400 years. That would be the interval from roughly the beginning of the "Little Ice Age" to now. So, in other words, we're now substantially warmer than the low point of a historically unprecedented low temperature interval.
Well, duh. Does the phrase "regression to the mean" ring any bells?
More
In other words, the conclusions of Mann et al. aren't very well supported --- and those are the ones most often used politically.
Get the NAS Report here (Score:4, Informative)
For those who want to bypass the dysfunctional reporting of the MSM, you can get the full report [nationalacademies.org] in PDF directly from NAS.
Also available from that link: The press release, audio of the press briefing, an abbreviated report and opening statement.
Stephen McIntyre offers interesting commentary on the report here [climateaudit.org].
Re:To: Mr. George W. Bush (Score:4, Informative)
Actually he has...
And 'human influence' doesn't really matter, we are just as screwed if it is caused by sunspots or volcanos as if it were caused by human beings. In fact concentrating on that is likely to make things worse as it only furthers the delusion that we are the sole source of anything bad happening, and that once we all switch to driving hybrids the Earth's climate will magically remain the same for thousands of years.
Re:Idiotic and Evident Lies (Score:3, Informative)
Re:To: Mr. George W. Bush (Score:5, Informative)
Download this: http://www.nap.edu/catalog/11676.html [nap.edu]
Flip to page 103 for Figure 10-6: Model-based estimates of global sufrface temperature compared to observational estimates with contributions of natural (volcanic and solar) and anthropogenic forcings for 25-year periods shown as color bars.
The anthropogenic bar in the last 25 years totally dominates all of the other bars. I haven't read the entire article, but it sounds to me like you haven't even bothered to read any of it and yet you feel totally comfortable spouting off about it.
Scientists will never clame to PROVE anything, so stop using political motivations to attack scientific findings.
Signed,
The Voice of Telling You To RTFA
Re:To: Mr. George W. Bush (Score:5, Informative)
Clue-bat: scientists don't try to prove things. Scientists have never tried to prove things. People who prove things are called logicians and mathemeticians, usually abstract math.
Instead, what scientists do is provide explanations for observations. If the explanation explains enough observations, the explanation becomes a "theory", defined as "A set of statements or principles devised to explain a group of facts or phenomena, especially one that has been repeatedly tested or is widely accepted and can be used to make predictions about natural phenomena."
(As opposed to a very different meaning of the word theory that is often incorrectly used by anti-science advocates: " An assumption based on limited information or knowledge; a conjecture.")
Proof is a mathematical concept. It isn't found in the real world. What is found is a quantity of evidence sufficient that it would be foolish to withold agreement. So, Mr. Fairness and Reason, what you're asking for doesn't exist. As such it's not very reasonable or fair to require it as some minimum threshold of something worth learning. But then again, perhaps that's exactly why you are the way you are...
Finally, it doesn't matter all that much if we're to blame. What matters is if we can alter current trends to prevent a forseeable worldwide ecological disaster. Unfortunately, humans lack the political will to prevent disaster (Katrina). Traditionally, we only act collectively to repair disasters. And for ecological disasters on this scale, the only thing that is clear is that by the time global warming really begins to hurt the wealthiest countries on the planet, there will be almost nothing anyone can do about it. As such, things are likely to get very, very bad before any substantive effort is made to change things.
Regards,
Ross
Re:Right, just past the mini-ice age.... (Score:4, Informative)
Then you know a lot of people ignorant on the topic. I was, too, until quite recently. We are well outside the normal zone of the typical cyclical temperature and CO2 variations, going back for hundreds of thousands of years.
> Temperatures were warmer 1000 years ago.
Uh, no, at least if Wikipedia is to be believed:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temperature_record_o
Please to take note of when we started going well past that 1000 year temperature high. Go see "An Inconvenient Truth" while you're at it.
Re:Didn't I just read.... ? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:To: Mr. George W. Bush (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Right, just past the mini-ice age.... (Score:5, Informative)
No, actually, that is not true. If you look at the report, they say there is data of sufficient quality to say we are hotter than we've been in *at least* 400 years. Before that, there is less confidence in the measurable proxies of temperature, yet it still appears current temperatures are hotter than any time going back to 900 AD. The data for previous times are even less reliable, and thus being careful scientists, the NAS is not willing to make statements about those times.
I don't know of anyone that does not accept global warming (as in the warming of regions of the earth). I know a lot of people which can't agree on the causes.
So you know a lot of scientifically ignorant people. Let's say this again for those in the back of the class: "Greenhouse gases are accumulating in Earth's atmosphere as a result of human activities, causing surface air temperatures and subsurface ocean temperatures to rise." (From the National Academy of Sciences [wikipedia.org]). Or, if you prefer, "Human activities ... are modifying the concentration of atmospheric constituents ... that absorb or scatter radiant energy. ... [M]ost of the observed warming over the last 50 years is likely to have been due to the increase in greenhouse gas concentrations" from the IPCC [wikipedia.org].
Cyclical Global warming != greenhouse effect.
True, that is why really smart scientists spend time examining the effect of anthropogenic climate change as a separate thing from cyclic climate change.
Greenhouse gases effect may play a part
Substitute do for may, and you are right.
For your edification, the report is available [nap.edu] in full format, and a 4 page executive summary.
-Ted
Re:What caused the warming 400 years ago? (Score:4, Informative)
Global warming is better than global cooling... (Score:3, Informative)
Two Qustions (Score:2, Informative)
2) Is this the hottest the Earth's ever been?
Answers:
1) No. The current warming trend started 100,000 years ago (long before the industrial revolution and CFCs).
2) No. The hottest the Earth has ever been was about 55,000,000 years ago (near the end of the Eocene era).
Humans are not entirely responsible for global warming. To say that we are is fearmongering.
Re:sucks to be you if you live in the desert (Score:3, Informative)
This guy [wirednewyork.com] describes it much better than I ever could. Yeah, the source is biased, but read the article for yourself and judge the points based on their merits. I think you'd find it difficult to argue.
Resistence is futile. (Score:4, Informative)
CO2 emissions will keep rising. China is building coal-fired power stations at a tremendous rate, and will probably keep doing so for a few decades, at least; India - which will have a larger population than China in a couple of decades - will be doing exactly the same thing. They're doing this because they need electricity to modernise their economies, and coal is both plentiful and cheap. Between them, they will probably pump out enough CO2 to fully compensate for the CO2 not emitted by the developed world.
Conclusion: it doesn't matter whether global warming is man-made or not. If it's natural, there's nothing we can do about it, and if it's man-made, it isn't going to be arrested any time soon.
So we are just going to have to live with the consequences.
Re:The hockey stick (Score:4, Informative)
Uh, they would be right there on the chart on the page you linked to - the error is provided in gray. You'll note, as pointed out in the NAS report, that the errors are smaller for data since 1600 or so. Nobody is misrepresenting error tolerance here - it was calculated and is displayed clearly in the graphic.
No, some glaciers are growing. (Score:3, Informative)
Some additional info (Score:5, Informative)
The chart at this site's page http://carto.eu.org/article2481.html [eu.org] , which is becoming a bit more frequently seen, shows the graph of C02 content in the atmosphere and temperature ranges over the last 400,000 years as derived from examining core samples, up to 1950. In that graph there is a strong corellation between C02 content and temperature change (increased C02 == increased temperature, etc.) The high point on the graph happened about 325,000 years ago when C02 content hit about 300 ppm.
In 1950 C02 content was around 285 ppm.
In 2006 C02 content was 383 ppm
That's nearly 100ppm greater than 56 years ago, nearly 83 ppm greater than the greatest peak currently recorded. We've had a 35% increase in CO2 content over the last 56 years. We're 28% above the previously recorded peak level from the last 400,000 years, and we're seeing record high temperatures for increasingly large spans of time into the past.
Given the nearly lock step relationship between C02 content and temperature change, the rate of increase and the extent of the increase over the last 56 years, and the absence of any other major contributor to CO2 content in the last 56 years, I find it really difficult to think that the human activities known to increase C02 emissions we've increasingly engaged in over the last 150 years have had little to nothing to do with the obvious increase in both C02 atmospheric content and resulting temperature/climate changes. The rate and amount of change seem to indicate that we're already beyond the normal range of variation, yet people still feel comfortable saying it's just the normal fluctuation of the planet's climate. I'd sincerely like to hear other viable explanations for the facts, but there haven't been any - the most well supported hypothisis remains that humans burning fossil fuels (in ever increasing numbers do to an also alarming rate of population growth) are truly affecting the climate.
What I'm also really curious about is why so many are so adamant about refusing to acknowledge what seems to be obvious, but that's a task for psychologists and philosophers I suppose.
Re:No, some glaciers are growing. (Score:5, Informative)
A similar effect is true of global temperature. Despite global warming, there are areas of the earth that are coolear. However, the global average is up. Note that temperatures at the poles can be affected very dramatically, the average at the north pole by as much as 8 degrees [nytimes.com]. This obviously has a greater impact on the polar ice than a 1 degree rise would have had.
Re:Interestingly, (Score:3, Informative)
Not necessarily less objective, just wrong. The quote you should have put there is... "All this proves is that SOME Democrats HAVE gone totally batshit insane."
There are common standards of insanity. Some clinical symptoms of batshit insanity:
Re:Alarming rate of population growth (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Queue up the proof by anecdote posts (Score:4, Informative)
Calculus must have been rough for you (Score:2, Informative)
Re:It's the medium term that is important (Score:2, Informative)
Ah, well, no. Look up the 8200 year event, and the Younger Dryas. A 10 degree C drop in like 20 years. And they came out of it in about 50. The end of the previous interglacial was assumed to to take thousands of years, but it appears now it went from hotter than now to full ice age in a century. It obviously took longer than that for the glaciers to build up enough to move, but the temperature regime was established. If you want to worry, then worry about unknown tipping points.
In fact it appears that since Antarctica and South America parted company, allowing the Antarctic Drift to go in circles rather than move cold water to the equator, the climate on this mudball has been notably unstable. Bummer.
And you can hope the solar cycle is partly responsible, because it is peaking now (actually has peaked but the climate effects lag) and that should reduce it's contribution to warming, so the rate of change should be leveling out by 2010. And it should be cooling by 2020.
And if it is all CO2 after all, then move to Denmark, become a citizen, and buy a retirement home on Greenland, which will be quite pleasant by then.
Re:Please turn the page.... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Reading the actual report is better than Yahoo (Score:2, Informative)
I think "historically unprecedented low temperature interval" is stretching it a bit far. There is still a lot of discussion on whether the Little Ice Age was of a regional or a global nature, see this link. [wikipedia.org]
Re:temperature (Score:4, Informative)
The reality is that the number of "Scientist 1"s is about 100 times greater than the number of "Scientist 2"s. The news media just amplifies the voices of the "Scientist 2"s for the sake of "balance". Most of the scientific debate is within the "Scientist 1" camp regarding the specifics of global warming (how much is human produced, how disruptive will it be down the road, what options do we have for controlling it). However, that doesn't make for a nice, ratings-boosting shouting match on Crossfire.
Fact is that the Earth is, on the whole, warming. Evidence suggests that it's mostly due to human activity (although that's far from proven). It's a strong hunch that a warming Earth will disrupt human activity -- we can be fairly certain that rainfall will shift, which will move food production and cause economic upheaval, although climate is such a chaotic system that we can't really say where the shifts will be. It's a strong hunch that it will result in more frequent hurricanes, more powerful hurricanes, or both (more heat = more ocean evaporation = hurricane fuel), which we might or might not be seeing already. It's a weaker hunch that, once we reach a certain amount of warming, the climate will abruptly swing from its current state to a different one -- evidence shows that historically there have been two climate settings ("hot house" and "ice age", with a 10 C swing between global averages), all of human existence has been in an "ice age" climate, and the swing might be caused by carbon sequestering (which we're currently undoing by pulling fossil fuels out of the ground and burning them).
Re:temperature (Score:5, Informative)
This has caused a renewed intrest in Deisel, which has always been traditionally lower in its CO2 emmissions, and with Petrol Pumps now also using BioDeisel blends in their fuel, as a pilot (They cannot use 100% biodiesel, as most cars are not adjusted for that)
This policy means that you are not penalised for driving a desirable car, just penalised for driving a polluting car.
To give you an example, I own a Jaguar X-Type Deisel, a very desirable, and pretty powerfull, responsive car. Yet I pay less tax than some people who have a fairly ordinary car, simply because my car pollutes less than theirs.
Re:temperature (Score:2, Informative)
Perhaps I wasn't clear, though I'm not quite sure how. When other massive industrial powers have essentially zero pollution controls, the miniscule benefit of hybrid electric vehicle adoption in the states is meaningless.
If you look at a lot of the so called environmental friendliness in the USA these days, what's really happened is we've exported our pollution generating needs (heavy manufacturing, electronics recycling) to countries where there are no EPA laws. It's much cheaper that way, in the short run. In the long run we ALL LOSE.
K, do we all get it now?
It was NOT just like now 400 years ago (Score:4, Informative)
Re:temperature (Score:3, Informative)
Re:temperature (Score:2, Informative)
God, I love the sound of global warming back-biting on Slashdot!
I think a lot of American's "do nothing" attitude stems from at laest two things.
First, there are some dire forecasts that suggest we're pretty much too late. We can engage in a massive, globe-encompassing effort, perhaps the most costly the world has ever seen*, and we'll reduce the rate of warming by 1/100%**. So we're doomed. We don't like to thing about being doomed, so we drive a really big car to help us forget. Yes, I know, we should at least not accelerate the problem, but Americans seem to like all or nothing solutions.
Second, I think people would listen more if we hadn't been through all this before, with the threat of a new ice age, billions starving, 90% of natural resources completely gone in 10 years, etc. We don't trust this kind of predictive science anymore. Also, almost everything 'bad' gets blamed on global warming. Plus, it doesn't help to call skeptics ignorant pig fuckers.
* Another idea - we can abandon civilization and eat nuts and berries. This idea gets no traction either.
* I made the number up, but some predictions show exceedingly diminishing returns for massive effort.