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- UK university launches interactive sea-level map
- Earth's storms differ from Jupiters
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Extreme global warming in the ancient past
Thursday, 11 November 2010 09:12
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| Solar system - Earth |
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The study was led by scientists at Utrecht University, working with colleagues at the NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research and the University of Southampton. The researchers took this approach to reconstruct variations in carbon dioxide levels across the MECO warming event, using fossilised algae preserved in sediment cores extracted from the seafloor near Tasmania, Australia, by the Ocean Drilling Program. They refined their estimates of carbon dioxide levels usinginformation on the past marine ecosystem derived from studying changes in the abundance of different groups of fossil plankton. Their analyses indicate that MECO carbon dioxide levels must have at least doubled over a period of around 400,000 years. In conjunction with these findings, analyses using two independent molecular proxies for sea surface temperature show that the climate warmed by between 4 and 6 degrees Celsius over the same period. “We found a close correspondence between carbon dioxide levels and sea surface temperature over the whole period, suggesting that increased amounts of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere played amajor role in global warming during the MECO,” said Bohaty. Source: National Oceanography Centre, UK |




Variations in atmospheric CO2 around 40 million years ago were tightly coupled to changes in global temperature, according to new findings published in the journal Science.