

Global Temperature Highest in Millennia
Global Temperature Highest in Thousands
of Years, Researchers Tell Science Journal
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| An iceberg from the Portage Glacier is locked in the frozen Portage Lake south of Anchorage, Alaska in this Jan. 6, 2004 file photo. The planet's temperature has climbed to levels not seen in thousands of years, researchers report in Tuesday's issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (AP Photo/Al Grillo, FILE) |
Sep 26, 2006 - The Associated
Press
WASHINGTON - The planet's temperature has climbed to levels not seen in thousands of years, warming that has begun to affect plants and animals, researchers report in Tuesday's issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The Earth has been warming at a rate of 0.36 degree Fahrenheit per decade for the last 30 years, according to the research team led by James Hansen of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York.
That brings the overall temperature to the warmest in the current interglacial period, which began about 12,000 years ago.
The researchers noted that a report in the journal Nature found that
1,700 plant, animal and insect species moved poleward at an average
rate of about 4 miles per decade in the last half of the 20th century.
The warming has been stronger in the far north, where melting ice
and snow expose darker land and rocks beneath allowing more warmth from
the sun to be absorbed, and more over land than water.
Water changes temperature more slowly than land because of its great
capacity to hold heat, but the researchers noted that the warming has
been marked in the Indian and western Pacific Oceans. Those oceans have
a major effect on climate and warming that could lead to more El Niño
episodes affecting the weather.
"This evidence implies that we are getting close to dangerous levels of human-made pollution," Hansen said in a statement.
Few scientists doubt that the planet has warmed, though some question the causes of the change.
Hansen, who first warned of the danger of climate change decades
ago, said that human-made greenhouse gases have become the dominant
climate change factor.
The study said the recent warming has brought global temperature to
a level within about one degree Celsius — 1.8 degree Fahrenheit — of
the maximum temperature of the past million years.
"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. The last time it was that warm was in the middle Pliocene, about
3 million years ago, when sea level was estimated to have been about 25
meters (80 feet) higher than today," Hansen said.
On the Net:
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences: http://www.pnas.org
Original Story found at: http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory?id=2489742
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