al conducted an extensive study on the Vostok
ice core data examining centennial events.
Not exact matches
The study, by an international team of scientists led by the University of Cambridge,
examined how changes in ocean currents in the Atlantic Ocean were related to climate conditions in the northern hemisphere during the last
ice age, by
examining data from
ice cores and fossilised plankton shells.
For example, if you
examine the
ice core data, say from Vostok station http://www1.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/
data/paleo/icecore/antarctica/vostok/ you may find many episodes with «bizzare» behavior.
That's a fatal flaw, before we even begin to
examine the use of the
ice core data.
In 1965 British climatologist Hubert Horace Lamb
examined historical records of harvests and precipitation, along with early
ice -
core and tree - ring
data, and concluded that the MWP was probably 1 — 2 °C (1.8 — 3.6 °F) warmer than early 20th - century conditions in Europe.
Their research, published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B,
examined a wide range of published
data arising from satellite imagery, charcoal records in sediments and isotope - ratio records in
ice cores, to build up a picture of wildfire in the recent and more distant past.