Not exact matches
In June 2015, NOAA researchers led by Thomas Karl published a paper in the journal Science comparing the new and previous NOAA sea surface temperature datasets, finding that the rate of global warming since 2000 had been underestimated and there was no so - called «hiatus» in warming in the first fifteen years of the 21st centur
In June 2015, NOAA researchers led by Thomas Karl published a paper
in the journal Science comparing the new and previous NOAA sea surface temperature datasets, finding that the rate of global warming since 2000 had been underestimated and there was no so - called «hiatus» in warming in the first fifteen years of the 21st centur
in the journal Science comparing the new and previous NOAA sea surface temperature datasets, finding that the rate of
global warming since 2000 had been underestimated and there was no so -
called «
hiatus»
in warming in the first fifteen years of the 21st centur
in warming in the first fifteen years of the 21st centur
in the first fifteen years of the 21st century.
The error is small enough to have confidence that the ocean heat content has been increasing
in the past 15 years, during the so
called «
hiatus»
in global warming.
Dan Barrie, program manager at NOAA,
called the research «compelling» and said: «[It] provides a powerful illustration of how the remote eastern tropical Pacific guides the behaviour of the
global ocean - atmosphere system,
in this case exhibiting a discernible influence on the recent
hiatus in global warming.»
But Peter Wadhams, a professor of ocean physics at the University of Cambridge, UK,
called the study careful and persuasive, and said: «I think it shows clearly that the so -
called «
hiatus» does not exist and that
global warming has continued over the past few years at the same rate as
in earlier years.»
LONDON, 13 December, 2015 — The so -
called, and much debated,
hiatus in global warming may never have happened, according to new research
LONDON, 7 June, 2015 − Forget about the so -
called «
hiatus»
in global warming.
There have been attempts
in the scientific literature to correct some misconceptions, such as a myth regarding an alleged recent «slow - down»
in global warming, a so -
called hiatus.
The whistleblower - scientist, John Bates, claimed that NOAA broke its own rules for scientific integrity when it published a noteworthy scientific study debunking the so -
called «
hiatus»
in global warming.