As the ice sheets waxed and waned, global climate drifted steadily toward cooler conditions characterized by increasingly severe glaciations and increasingly
cool interglacial phases.
Not exact matches
The study Harris authored found that «the data... clearly shows the nominal 100KY cycle for glaciation and the
interglacial phases and it shows that we have reached the end of the typical
interglacial cycle and are due for a sudden
cooling climate change.
So in the past, as shown from the ice core records, when the
interglacial cycle reaches its
cooling phase and the atmosphere starts to
cool in spite of increasing CO2 levels (proven that changes in CO2 lags temperature change by about 800 years) you are saying that didn't happen?
Ignoring the warming at the beginning of the Eemian
interglacial, look at the
cooling phase of the
interglacial.
Look at the Eemian
Interglacial cooling phase ice core temp v CO2 for example.