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Earth's Climate and Orbital Eccentricity : The Marine Isotope Stage 11 Question

Burckle, Lloyd H.(Edited by)Droxler, Andre W.(Edited by)Poore, Richard Z.(Edited by)
Part of the Geophysical Monograph Series series
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Published by the American Geophysical Union as part of the Geophysical Monograph Series, Volume 137. Weather bureaus around the world have accumulated daily historical records of atmospheric conditions for more than a century to help forecast meteorological conditions three to five days ahead.

To gain insight into the impact of possible future climate warming and constrain predictive models for a warm future, climatologists are seeking paleoclimatologic and paleoceanographic records from the most recent intervals in the Quaternary when conditions were demonstrably warmer than they are today. In the past 2.5 My, Earth climate has oscillated from cold (glacial) to warm (interglacial) intervals.

We currently live in a warm interval, the Holocene, during which the climate has remained relatively constant for about 10 ky. Because the Holocene is nearly as long now as the previous interglacial, scientists have projected the possibly imminent onset of another ice age, excluding human intervention.

Whether or not this will occur is a question of some significance, and has sparked debate.

Finding an analogue to our current status in other recent interglacials offers substantive aid in clarifying the question just mentioned, and others, concerning global climate change over varying geologic time periods.

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Product Details
American Geophysical Union
0875909965 / 9780875909967
Hardback
01/01/2003
United States
240 pages
224 x 274 mm, 748 grams