Sentences with phrase «today during the medieval warm period»

However, there are many peer reviewed studies from various locations worldwide which show that temperatures were probably higher than today during the medieval warm period.
The sea level may also have been higher than today during the Medieval Warm Period.
After getting back home to Corvallis, Oregon, I read a letter to the editor of our local newspaper claiming that it was much warmer than today during the medieval warm period.

Not exact matches

In his seminal 1982 book Climate, History, and the Modern World, the renown climatologist Dr. H.H. Lamb revealed that sea ice in the subarctic and Arctic regions was much less extensive during the Medieval Warm Period (9th - 13th centuries) compared to today.
They found that sea surface temperatures during the Medieval Warm Period are approximately equal to today's temperatures.
Evidence such as this agrees with the idea that temperatures were at least as warm during the «Medieval Warm Period» as they are towarm during the «Medieval Warm Period» as they are toWarm Period» as they are today.
Suppose that during the Medieval Warm Period, Earth was 1 °C warmer than today.
Previously, it had been thought that during the so - called Medieval Warm Period, the earth was significantly warmer than today (and of course the graph of temperature trends looked much different).
«Prior to the Little Ice Age, during the Medieval Warm Period, Vikings colonised Greenland and Newfoundland, when it was warmer there than today.
During high solar output of the Medieval Warm Period, tropical waters in both the Atlantic13 and Pacific14 increased by as much as 1 °C warmer than today.
I've got eight other graphs on the DeSmog Blog, none of which has been questioned in the least, all showing a hockey stick shape in the temperature from 1,000 years ago to today, and all of them showing a pretty similar — the idea that there was a Medieval Warming Period during which the temperature was higher than it is now is, that is like, flagrantly incorrect is the nicest way that I can say it.
People farmed further north during the Medieval Warm Period than they do today.
Furthermore, much evidence indicates that today's warm temperatures remain below peak temperatures experienced during the Medieval Warm Period of 1,000 years ago, the Roman Warm Period of 2,000 years ago and the Holocene Climatic Optimum of 5,000 years warm temperatures remain below peak temperatures experienced during the Medieval Warm Period of 1,000 years ago, the Roman Warm Period of 2,000 years ago and the Holocene Climatic Optimum of 5,000 years Warm Period of 1,000 years ago, the Roman Warm Period of 2,000 years ago and the Holocene Climatic Optimum of 5,000 years Warm Period of 2,000 years ago and the Holocene Climatic Optimum of 5,000 years ago.
The premise for this scare story is that Greenland's glaciers or the Western Antarctic ice sheet will melt, but neither of these melted when temperatures were as high as, or higher than today, during the Medieval Warm period 1,000 years ago, or the Roman Warm period 1,000 years earlier.
Note co2 concentrations were lower during the Minoan, Roman, and Medieval Warm periods which were as warm or warmer then toWarm periods which were as warm or warmer then towarm or warmer then today.
One exception to this occurred during the Medieval Warm Period of 1100 — 1200 A.D., when warm conditions similar to today's climate caused the sea level to rise 5 — 8 ″ (12 — 21 cm) higher than present (Grinsted et al., 20Warm Period of 1100 — 1200 A.D., when warm conditions similar to today's climate caused the sea level to rise 5 — 8 ″ (12 — 21 cm) higher than present (Grinsted et al., 20warm conditions similar to today's climate caused the sea level to rise 5 — 8 ″ (12 — 21 cm) higher than present (Grinsted et al., 2008).
The highest global sea level of the past 110,000 years likely occurred during the Medieval Warm Period of 1100 — 1200 A.D., when warm conditions similar to today's climate caused the sea level to rise 5 — 8 ″ (12 — 21 cm) higher than presWarm Period of 1100 — 1200 A.D., when warm conditions similar to today's climate caused the sea level to rise 5 — 8 ″ (12 — 21 cm) higher than preswarm conditions similar to today's climate caused the sea level to rise 5 — 8 ″ (12 — 21 cm) higher than present.
Evidence of warming on the Kola Peninsula (c. AD 1000 — 1300) is provided by treeline studies, which show that pine grew at least 100 — 140 m above the modern limit during the Medieval period, which corresponds to a (summer or annual average) temperature at least 0.8 °C higher than today (Hiller et al. 2001).
That conclusion is based not on climate models or recent trends in forest fires, but rather on records of forest fires that occurred more than a millennium ago, during the Medieval Climate Anomaly, a period when global temperatures were comparable to what they are today, and about half a degree warmer (on the Celsius scale) than they had been for several centuries prior.
The «Greenland myth» is that the global climate was so much warmer during the Medieval Warm Period that Greenland, a frozen wasteland today, was so hospitable that it was named as it was and supported a thriving colony of Norse.
Things were good during the warmth of the Holocene Optimum when Mesopotamia flourished, they were good during the Medieval Warm Period when Vikings inhabited Greenland, and things have never been better than they are today, even though today is warmer than the norm.
One of the main themes that is promoted by «swindle» and people like Beck is that there was a Medieval Warm Period during which temperatures were warmer than they are today, and that therefore today's global warming is due to «natural causes».
The Fram Strait water temperatures today are about 2.5 degrees F warmer than during the Medieval Warm Period.
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