Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Arctic warmer than in last 2,000 years, new study finds
The international study, published Thursday in the journal Science, also provides real-world evidence to back mathematical climate models that suggest greenhouse gases are behind global warming.
"There are no other forcing factors at work other than the greenhouse gas composition of the atmosphere that could explain the dramatic warming that took place," said Darrell Kaufman, the paper's lead author, from Northern Arizona University.
Kaufman and nearly three dozen scientists used data from tree rings, lake sediments and glacial ice deposits from 23 sites around the circumpolar world to track average summer temperatures for every decade of the last two millennia -- 1,600 years longer than had ever been done before.
All three methods are well-accepted ways of estimating weather. The warmer the summer, the thicker a tree ring or layer of organic sediment. The measurements showed that from Year 1 to about 1900, summer Arctic temperatures were gradually decreasing by about 0.2 C. every 1,000 years.
That corresponds with other studies that have calculated the result of tiny decreases in the amount of solar energy the North gets as a result of wobbles in the Earth's orbit.
But things began to change at the beginning of the 20th century.
Data from all three sources showed a dramatic upward jog that, in a graph, looks like the blade of a hockey stick. The research suggests four of the Arctic's five warmest decades occurred after 1950.
And the warmest decade was 1999-2008, which saw average temperatures about 1.4 C higher than they would have been if the cooling trend had continued.
"The warming that we detected, particularly during the second half of the 20th century, is especially dramatic considered against the background of the previous 19," Kaufman said.
The study says the fact no other major variables changed about that time -- there were no large volcanic eruptions, for example -- suggests there could only be one culprit for the warming Arctic: carbon dioxide emissions that began increasing rapidly during the Industrial Revolution.
Just as important was the comparison between Kaufman's data-based temperatures and those generated by computer climate models.
The latter are often used by scientists to predict the effects of global warming and are just as often criticized by skeptics as mere speculation. The correlation between the two suggests the models work, said Kaufman.
-- The Canadian Press
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition September 4, 2009 A2
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