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How is Today’s Warming Different from the Past?

How is Today’s Warming Different from the Past?

by The Daily Eye Team June 27 2014, 7:20 am Estimated Reading Time: 0 mins, 57 secs

Earth has experienced climate change in the past without help from humanity. We know about past climates because of evidence left in tree rings, layers of ice in glaciers, ocean sediments, coral reefs, and layers of sedimentary rocks. For example, bubbles of air in glacial ice trap tiny samples of Earth’s atmosphere, giving scientists a history of greenhouse gases that stretches back more than 800,000 years. The chemical make-up of the ice provides clues to the average global temperature. Using this ancient evidence, scientists have built a record of Earth’s past climates, or “paleoclimates.” The paleo climate record combined with global models shows past ice ages as well as periods even warmer than today. But the paleo climate record also reveals that the current climatic warming is occurring much more rapidly than past warming events. As the Earth moved out of ice ages over the past million years, the global temperature rose a total of 4 to 7 degrees Celsius over about 5,000 years. In the past century alone, the temperature has climbed 0.7 degrees Celsius, roughly ten times faster than the average rate of ice-age-recovery warming.

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