Earth hottest in thousands of years

Source ENS Image courtesy Sir Alister Hardy Foundation for Ocean Science

The world's temperature has increased to levels not seen in at least 12,000 years, US climate scientists report in the Sept. 26th issue of "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences." Rapid warming has occurred in the past 30 years, the researchers said, and there is little doubt that human activities are the primary factor. Study coauthor James Hansen of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies said the new findings imply that the world is "getting close to dangerous levels" of manmade greenhouse gases. The study concludes the Earth is now reaching and passing through the warmest levels in the current interglacial period, which has lasted nearly 12,000 years. This warming is also forcing a migration of plant and animal species toward the poles, the researchers said. Worldwide instrumental temperature measurements during the past century show the planet warmed at a rate of 0.36 degree Fahrenheit per decade for the past 30 years. This observed warming is similar to the warming rate predicted in the 1980s in initial global climate model simulations with changing levels of greenhouse gases, the researchers said. Earth Earth's temperature is approaching levels not seen in a million years. Furthermore, the warming in recent decades has brought global temperature to a level within about 1.8 degree Fahrenheit of the maximum temperature of the past million years. "That means that further global warming of 1 degree Celsius defines a critical level," Hansen said. "If warming is kept less than that, effects of global warming may be relatively manageable." During the warmest interglacial periods, the climate was "reasonably similar" to today, Hansen added. "But if further global warming reaches 2 or 3 degrees Celsius, we will likely see changes that make Earth a different planet than the one we know," he said. "The last time it was that warm was in the middle Pliocene, about three million years ago, when sea level was estimated to have been about 80 feet higher than today." Hansen added that global warming is already beginning to have noticeable effects in nature. Plants and animals can survive only within certain climatic zones"the warming of recent decades has thus forced many of them to begin to migrate poleward. A 2003 study that appeared in the journal "Nature" found that 1,700 plant, animal and insect species moved poleward at an average rate of about four miles per decade in the last half of the 20th century. Hansen said that migration rate is not fast enough to keep up with the current rate of movement of a given temperature zone, which has reached about 25 miles per decade in the period 1975 to 2005. "Rapid movement of climatic zones is going to be another stress on wildlife" Hansen said. "It adds to the stress of habitat loss due to human developments. If we do not slow down the rate of global warming, many species are likely to become extinct. In effect we are pushing them off the planet." Another key finding is the temperature change in the area of the Pacific Ocean where the sometimes dramatic weather pattern known as El Niño develops. An El Niño is a weather phenomenon that typically happens every two to seven years when the warm surface waters in the West Pacific push eastward toward South America, in the process altering weather patterns around the word. Hansen and his colleagues suggest that increased temperature difference between the Western and Eastern Pacific may boost the likelihood of strong El Niños, such as those of 1983 and 1998. The study comes in the wake of a slew of new research documenting increased warming and the effects on the environment, particularly in the Arctic. Polar bears Scientists have found that global warming is having adverse affects on polar bears. European scientists recently reported dramatic openings over large areas of the Arctic's perennial sea ice pack in August and a study released last week found Greenland's ice sheet is melting far faster than scientists had previously thought. Two other studies published this month by NASA scientists indicate that Arctic sea ice is melting at extraordinary rates. One study found that the total amount of Arctic sea ice has fallen by six percent over each of the last two winters, compared to a loss of 1.5 percent per decade since 1979. The second study revealed that perennial sea ice in the Arctic shrank by 14 percent between 2004 and 2005, a striking change compared to the period between 1979 to 2003, when perennial ice decreased at a rate of nine percent per decade. Furthermore, British scientists reported this month that ice core records from Antarctica show the current levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide "the leading greenhouse gas"are higher now than at any time in the past 800,000 years and increasing at an unprecedented rate.