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From: Penn State
Published September 2, 2008 08:57 AM
Global warming greatest in past decade
Researchers confirm that surface temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere
were warmer over the last 10 years than any time during the last 1300 years,
and, if the climate scientists include the somewhat controversial data
derived from tree-ring records, the warming is anomalous for at least 1700
years.
"Some have argued that tree-ring data is unacceptable for this type of
study," says Michael Mann, associate professor of meteorology and
geosciences and director of Penn State's Earth System Science Center. "Now
we can eliminate tree rings and still have enough data from other so-called
'proxies' to derive a long-term Northern Hemisphere temperature record."
The proxies used by the researchers included information from marine and
lake sediment cores, ice cores, coral cores and tree rings.
"We looked at a much expanded database and our methods are more
sophisticated than those used previously," says Mann. In today's (Sept. 2)
online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the
researchers note, "Conclusions are less definitive for the Southern
Hemisphere and globe, which we attribute to larger uncertainties arising
from the sparser available proxy data in the Southern Hemisphere."
The research team included Mann; Ray Bradley, university distinguished
professor, geosciences and director, Climate System Research Center,
University of Massachusetts; Malcolm Hughes, regents' professor, and Fenbiao
Ni, research associate, the Laboratory of Tree Ring Research, University of
Arizona; Zhihua Zhang and Sonya Miller, research associates, meteorology,
Penn State; and Scott Rutherford, assistant professor, environmental
sciences, Roger Williams University.
The National Research Council suggested revisiting surface temperatures in
their "Surface Temperature Reconstructions for the Last 2,000 Years," to
include newer data and techniques and confirmed results of a 1990s paper by
Mann and colleagues.
Results of this study without tree-ring data show that for the Northern
Hemisphere, the last 10 years are likely unusually warm for not just the
past 1,000 as reported in the 1990s paper and others, but for at least
another 300 years going back to about A.D. 700 without using tree-ring data.
The same conclusion holds back to A.D. 300 if the researchers include
tree-ring data.
One of the reasons that including tree-ring data in these studies raises
possible concerns is something called the "segment length curse." This
"curse" occurs because trees put on rings every year, but older trees put on
narrower rings. When tree ring researchers piece together tree-ring series
from two trees, they must account for this factor in how they combine the
later rings on one tree with the earlier rings on a younger tree. In the
process, some information regarding long-term trends can be lost.
"Ten years ago, we could not simply eliminate all the tree-ring data from
our network because we did not have enough other proxy climate records to
piece together a reliable global record," says Mann. "With the considerably
expanded networks of data now available, we can indeed obtain a reliable
long-term record without using tree rings."
The new study shows that, with caveats, tree-ring data can be used, but that
even without including that data, it is clear that the anomalous nature of
recent warmth, which most scientists believe to be a result of human impacts
on climate, is a reality. |