Ocean scientist James McCarthy of Harvard University discussed recent evidence from the oceans that climate change is occurring, including rising water temperatures.
Not exact matches
James Kirkpatrick, a postdoctoral researcher from UC Santa Cruz, is among the
scientists on board and posted a report on the web site of the Japan Trench Fast Drilling Project (JFAST), Expedition 343 of the Integrated
Ocean Drilling Program.
The paper was was written by 17 prominent climate, ice and
ocean scientists, led by
James E. Hansen, the pioneering climatologist who since 2007 has argued that most of his peers have been too reticent in their projections of the possible pace of sea - level rise in a warming world.
Foreword by Dr, F,
James Rutherford American association for the Advancement of Science «Astronomical Cycle:
Scientists believe astronomical cycles touch off changes in the
ocean - Atmosphere system that drives the world's climate.
Unless emissions are reined in,
ocean acidity could increase by 200 percent by the end of the century and even more in the next century, said
James Barry, a senior
scientist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in California and one of the study's authors.
In a world where the sea - level is rising, the
oceans are heating, and the polar ice is melting — all without pause or evident limit — it's no wonder that more - and - more serious yet formerly skeptical
scientists — like Dr. Petr Chylek and Adm David Titley for example — are embracing
James Hansen's climate - science consensus!
This is why
scientists such as
James Hansen refer to global warming as an inter-generational issue, because the heating due to our emissions are only fully felt by the next generation, due to the time lag created by the
oceans.
The occurrences discussed in this article are five of some 60 known weather - related phenomenon, which can lead to what climate
scientist James Hansen has termed the «Venus Syndrome,» where
oceans would boil and the surface temperature of earth could reach 462 degrees Celsius.
1 — Dr.
James Hansen, lead climate
scientist and director of Goddard Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute —
Ocean and Climate Change Institute Global warming is pretty well accepted by the scientific community.
The satellite will help climate
scientists arrive at a more accurate picture of the
ocean currents, The Guardian's
James Randerson reports, by comparing their surface shape with the fluctuations in the planet's gravitational field.