The similarity appears to diverge from observations of ENSO variability since the 1970's indicating that ENSO since then is anomalous to natural variability i.e. ENSO may be relatively
stable during interglacials.
Not exact matches
Many of the glaciers that jut out into the ocean are thinning, but whether the ice sheet itself has remained
stable and intact, even
during warm
interglacial periods, is a matter of considerable debate.
Remember also that homo sapiens has evolved
during a
stable interglacial, and our biology and institutions and entire economic system is based around this.
Civilization developed
during the Holocene, the
interglacial period of the past 10,000 years
during which global temperature and sea level have been unusually
stable.
For roughly the past 10,000 years, since the end of the last Ice Age, human beings have enjoyed a relatively
stable, comfortable «
interglacial» period,
during which they've invented everything from agriculture to moon rockets.
Atmospheric CO2
during the Last
Interglacial was comparable to the pre-industrial Holocene and reasonably
stable, which prevents the period being a good analogue for future climate.
Ice sheet collapse following a prolonged period of
stable sea level
during the last
interglacial.