Naveau, P., Guillou, A. and Rietsch, T. (2014), A non-parametric entropy - based approach to
detect changes in climate extremes.
Not exact matches
Human influence has been
detected in warming of the atmosphere and the ocean,
in changes in the global water cycle,
in reductions
in snow and ice,
in global mean sea level rise, and
in changes in some
climate extremes.
Human influence has been
detected in warming of the atmosphere and the ocean,
in changes in the global water cycle,
in reductions
in snow and ice,
in global mean sea level rise, and
in changes in some
climate extremes (see Figure SPM.6 and Table SPM.1).
Roger has gone so far as to claim
in his recent TNR essay that
climate change does not increase
extremes, and that»... our research, and that of others, suggests that assuming that these projections are accurate, it will be many decades, perhaps longer, before the signal of human - caused
climate change can be
detected.»
The IPCC's Fifth Assessment Report (Summary for Policymakers) states, «Human influence has been
detected in warming of the atmosphere and the ocean,
in changes in the global water cycle,
in reductions
in snow and ice,
in global mean sea level rise, and
in changes in some
climate extremes.
«Human influence has been
detected in warming of the atmosphere and the ocean,
in changes in the global water cycle,
in reductions
in snow and ice,
in global mean sea level rise, and
in changes in some
climate extremes,» the report said.