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Earth's hot past points to drastic global warming

Washington, Jan 14 (ANI): A new analysis has concluded that the magnitude of climate change during Earth's deep past suggests that future temperatures may eventually rise far more than projected if society continues its pace of emitting greenhouse gases.

Building on recent research, the study examines the relationship between global temperatures and high levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere tens of millions of years ago. It warns that, if carbon dioxide emissions continue at their current rate through the end of this century, atmospheric concentrations of the greenhouse gas will reach levels that existed about 30 million to 100 million years ago, when global temperatures averaged about 29 degrees Fahrenheit (16 degrees Celsius) above pre-industrial levels.

National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) scientist Jeffrey Kiehl said that global temperatures might gradually rise over centuries or millennia in response to the carbon dioxide. The elevated levels of carbon dioxide may remain in the atmosphere for tens of thousands of years, according to recent computer model studies of geochemical processes that the study cites.

Kiehl focused on a fundamental question: when was the last time Earth's atmosphere contained as much carbon dioxide as it may by the end of this century?

If society continues on its current pace of increasing the burning of fossil fuels, atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide are expected to reach about 900 to 1,000 parts per million by the end of this century. That compares with current levels of about 390 parts per million, and pre-industrial levels of about 280 parts per million.

Kiehl applied mathematical formulas to calculate that Earth's average annual temperature 30 to 40 million years ago was about 88 degrees F (31 degrees C)-substantially higher than the pre-industrial average temperature of about 59 degrees F (15 degrees C).

The study will appear as a "Perspectives" piece in the journal Science. (ANI)

Global warming has caused Earth's seasons to arrive 2 days earlier

Washington, Jan 22 (ANI): A new study has brought to the fore another adverse effect of global warming, suggesting that it has led to Earth's seasons to arrive 2 days earlier than before.The study, by scientists from the University of California, Berkeley, and Harvard University, has determined that not only has the average global temperature increased in the past 50 years, but the hottest day of the year has shifted nearly two days earlier.Just as human-generated greenhouse gases.....
User Comments
Arno Arrak 15 Jan 2011 04:43 am
These "experts" are expert at hiding recent work by Ferenc Miskolczi that negates their argument about global warming. Miskolczi determined that the optical thickness of the atmosphere in the infrared (where carbon dioxide absorbs) has not changed for the last 61 years. What this means is that the transparency of the atmosphere to heat radiation from below has not changed during all these years of constant addition of CO2 to the atmosphere. To put it in other words: the greenhouse absorption...
NobodyYouKnow 14 Jan 2011 08:20 pm
May I apologize for MeMe Mine. He is a failed playwrite with no understanding of the science and too much time on his hands. Even his children won't speak to him so he takes out his anger on the future. And no. He was never a 'believer'. Not that science is about belief anyway. One of the flaws in his post is his thinking that the popularity of science or a theory is somehow part of the validity. As Einstein said of the '100 scientists against Einstein', "Why 100? If I was wrong, ONE would be...
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