3.4.1Background Global warmingis a term used to describe the contemporary increase in the average temperature of the Earth's atmosphere and oceans. Although local temperatures fluctuate naturally, the rising trend that is known as “global warming” can be separated from historical and/or pre-hist...
doi:10.22621/CFN.V126I1.1308A. B. BeaudoinCanadian Field-Naturalist
Erratum: The 'pause' in global warming in historical context: II. Comparing models to observations (2018 Environ. Res. Lett . 13 123007) We review the evidence for a putative early 21st-century divergence between global mean surface temperature ( GMST ) and Coupled Model Intercomparison Proj.....
Global warming lies are finally running out of steam. None of the crisis scares ever came true. The climate is fine, the seas didn’t rise, the ice sheets are just fine and the only thing that really happened is the theft and laundering of a lot of money. The fun has started at COP...
Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) models. The authors note that theCMIP6 historical simulations "show very little netanthropogenicwarming before the 1960s. This contrasts with theCMIP5 historical simulations, which showed on average approximately 0.2°C warming by the mid-twentieth century...
In dealing with both the science and the political background to the global warming and other scares, his book is a valuable addition to the growing literature calling for a restoration of objectivity and freedom of thought in the environmental sciences. ...
The present study offers a holistic description of northern maritime climate – from the Last Glacial Maximum through to the projected global warming of the 21st century – in this context. It includes the compilation of the most complete temperature record for Norway and the Norwegian Sea to ...
An Analysis of Historical Global Warming and Social EngagementTrain, JosephRoizenman, DavidDamiani, SethRochwerg, Ronny
Warming global temperatures cause land ice to melt and oceans to thermally expand, elevating sea levels. Since 1880, they’ve risen an estimated 8-9 inches (over 20 cm) based on historical data from coastal tide gauge stations.In the 1990s, scientists began using satellites to measure sea ...
The historical association of time with the rotation of Earth has meant that Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) closely follows this rotation1. Because the rotation rate is not constant, UTC contains discontinuities (leap seconds), which complicates its use in computer networks2. Since 1972, all UT...