NOAA's Paleoclimatology Program has assembled the following products from our large archive of
paleoclimatology data.
NCEI provides
the paleoclimatology data and information scientists need to understand natural climate variability and future climate change.
Paleoclimatology data are derived from natural sources such as tree rings, ice cores, corals, and ocean and lake sediments.
A new paper that combines
paleoclimatology data for the last 56 million years with molecular genetic evidence concludes there were no biological extinctions [of Arctic marine animals] over the last 1.5 M years despite profound Arctic sea ice changes that included ice - free summers: polar bears, seals, walrus and other species successfully adapted to habitat changes that exceeded those predicted by USGS and US Fish and Wildlife polar bear biologists over the next 100 years.
[Response: Most of these reconstructions are archived at the NOAA
Paleoclimatology Data Center.
Paleoclimatology data are derived from natural sources such as tree rings, ice cores, corals, and ocean and lake sediments.
Not exact matches
The GISP2
data (R Alley
data at the WDC
paleoclimatology site) says that the Greenland temperature peaked in 8000BC and in 7000BC and in 1400BC (with a sub peak half a degree lower in 100BC), at about 2 degrees C warmer than today.
Coby, For what it's worth, here's where that «it was based on one tree» claim likely came from: «McIntyre and McKitrick went back to the source of the Gaspé series and then to the archived
data at the World Data Center for Paleoclimatol
data at the World
Data Center for Paleoclimatol
Data Center for
Paleoclimatology.
The
data is a smoothed set that I used directly from the NOAA
Paleoclimatology Program.
The NOAA
Paleoclimatology Reconstructions Network has made available paleo
data for download including 92 high - resolution temperature records over the past 2 + millennia.
The World
Data Center (WDC) for Paleoclimatology maintains archives of ice core data from polar and low - latitude mountain glaciers and ice caps throughout the wo
Data Center (WDC) for
Paleoclimatology maintains archives of ice core
data from polar and low - latitude mountain glaciers and ice caps throughout the wo
data from polar and low - latitude mountain glaciers and ice caps throughout the world.
In most cases, these range from about 2 to 4.5 C per doubled CO2 within the context of our current climate — with a most likely value between 2 and 3 C. On the other hand, chapter 9 describes attempts ranging far back into
paleoclimatology to relate forcings to temperature change, sometimes directly (with all the attendant uncertainties), and more often by adjusting model parameters to determine the climate sensitivity ranges that allow the models to best simulate
data from the past — e.g., the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM).
Furthermore,
paleoclimatology provides
data that we can use to model and predict both current and future climate change scenarios.
The US CLIVAR POS Panel seeks new panelists with expertise in one or more of the following areas: (a) operational
data assimilation, (b) satellite oceanography, (c) emerging technologies / observations, or (d) paleooceanography /
paleoclimatology.
To build the database, the team collated published records archived in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Paleoclimatology and German PANGAEA online
data repositories, as well as additional
data reported in tables of scientific papers (but not yet registered in global databases) and some
data sets contributed directly by authors.
(b) To understand the present and predict the future we need reliable
data from
paleoclimatology studies.
We anticipate the field of
paleoclimatology moving toward
data sets that can be used to develop spatial maps (with associated errors) for each season of the last one to two millennia, using techniques that can easily accommodate continual revision to our best available estimates as new series are developed.
Listings and search results from this page include
data archived by the World Data Center for Paleoclimatology / NOAA Paleoclimatology Program and by the Neotoma Paleoecology Datab
data archived by the World
Data Center for Paleoclimatology / NOAA Paleoclimatology Program and by the Neotoma Paleoecology Datab
Data Center for
Paleoclimatology / NOAA
Paleoclimatology Program and by the Neotoma Paleoecology Database.
Marshalling
data spanning centuries and continents, the book affirms the headlines with cutting - edge research and visual records, including contributions from experts on atmospheric science, oceanography,
paleoclimatology, technology, politics, and the polar regions.
I realise
data scatter is a fact of life in
paleoclimatology, but is 5 % really OK?