It suggests that carbon dioxide is not the primary driver of
planetary warming events, as other factors now have stronger weight on the final result.
Not exact matches
In the current era in which the problems of global
warming can lead to
planetary catastrophe, every city has to have a plan for adapting to climate change, especially thosesubject toextreme
events.
However even the moderate scenarios which have eventual stabilisation give more
warming than 0.8 C. Even in the extremely unlikely
event that there is no further growth in emissions, the current
planetary energy imbalance (estimated to be almost 1W / m2)(due to the ocean thermal inertia) implies that there is around 0.5 C extra
warming already in the pipeline that will be realised over the next 20 to 30 years.
You propose the so - called saw tooth as having it's cause in a massive seismic
event that produced decadal scale
warming on a
planetary scale.
The interglacial and the glacial
planetary temperature data shows cycles of
warming and cooling interrupted by very strong «RCEs» (Rickies) Rapid Climatic Change
Events (For example the Younger Dryas abrupt cooling
event and the termination of the last interglacial).
Global
warming makes planetary wave resonance events more likely (2017) Record Balkan floods of 2014 linked to planetary wave resonance (2016) The Likelihood of Recent Record Warmth (2016) A Decade of Weather Extremes (Nature Climate Change 2012) Increase of Extreme Events in a Warming World [+ data
warming makes
planetary wave resonance
events more likely (2017) Record Balkan floods of 2014 linked to planetary wave resonance (2016) The Likelihood of Recent Record Warmth (2016) A Decade of Weather Extremes (Nature Climate Change 2012) Increase of Extreme Events in a Warming World [+ data /
events more likely (2017) Record Balkan floods of 2014 linked to
planetary wave resonance (2016) The Likelihood of Recent Record Warmth (2016) A Decade of Weather Extremes (Nature Climate Change 2012) Increase of Extreme
Events in a Warming World [+ data /
Events in a
Warming World [+ data
Warming World [+ data / code]
(06/02/2013) Rainforests in South America have endured three previous extreme global
warming events in the past, suggesting they will survive a projected 2 - 6 degree rise in temperatures over the coming century, reports a study published in the Annual Review of Earth and
Planetary Science.