Climate research
Modern research into climatic variation and change is based on a variety of empirical and theoretical lines of inquiry. One line of inquiry is the analysis of data that record changes in atmosphere, oceans, and climate from roughly 1850 to the present. In a second line of inquiry, information describing paleoclimatic changes is gathered from “proxy,” or indirect, sources such as ocean and lake sediments, pollen grains, corals, ice cores, and tree rings. Finally, a variety of theoretical models can be used to investigate the behaviour of Earth’s climate under different conditions. These three lines of investigation are described in this section.
Modern observations
Although a limited regional subset of land-based records is available from the 17th and 18th centuries, instrumental measurements of key climate variables have been collected systematically and at global scales since the mid-19th to early 20th century. These data include measurements of surface temperature on land and at sea, atmospheric pressure at sea level, precipitation over continents and oceans, sea ice extents, surface winds, humidity, and tides. Such records are the most reliable of all available climate data, since they are precisely dated and are based on well-understood instruments and physical principles. Corrections must be made for uncertainties in the data (for instance, gaps in the observational record, particularly during earlier years) and for systematic errors (such as an “urban heat island” bias in temperature measurements made on land).
Since the mid-20th century a variety of upper-air observations have become available (for example, of temperature, humidity, and winds), allowing climatic conditions to be characterized from the ground upward through the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere. Since the 1970s these data have been supplemented by polar-orbiting and geostationary satellites and by platforms in the oceans that gauge temperature, salinity, and other properties of seawater. Attempts have been made to fill the gaps in early measurements by using various statistical techniques and “backward prediction” models and by assimilating available observations into numerical weather prediction models. These techniques seek to estimate meteorological observations or atmospheric variables (such as relative humidity) that have been poorly measured in the past.
Modern measurements of greenhouse gas concentrations began with an investigation of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations by American climate scientist Charles Keeling at the summit of Mauna Loa in Hawaii in 1958. Keeling’s findings indicated that CO2 concentrations were steadily rising in association with the combustion of fossil fuels, and they also yielded the famous “Keeling curve,” a graph in which the longer-term rising trend is superimposed on small oscillations related to seasonal variations in the uptake and release of CO2 from photosynthesis and respiration in the terrestrial biosphere. Keeling’s measurements at Mauna Loa apply primarily to the Northern Hemisphere.
Taking into account the uncertainties, the instrumental climate record indicates substantial trends since the end of the 19th century consistent with a warming Earth. These trends include a rise in global surface temperature of 0.9 °C (1.5 °F) between 1880 and 2012, an associated elevation of global sea level of 19–21 cm (7.5–8.3 inches) between 1901 and 2010, and a decrease in snow cover in the Northern Hemisphere of approximately 1.5 million square km (580,000 square miles). Records of average global temperatures kept by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) indicate that the years 1998, 2005, and 2010 are statistically tied with one another as the warmest years since modern record keeping began in 1880; the WMO also noted that the decade 2001–10 was the warmest decade since 1880. Increases in global sea level are attributed to a combination of seawater expansion due to ocean heating and freshwater runoff caused by the melting of terrestrial ice. Reductions in snow cover are the result of warmer temperatures favouring a steadily shrinking winter season.
Climate data collected during the first two decades of the 21st century reveal that surface warming between 2005 and 2014 proceeded slightly more slowly than was expected from the effect of greenhouse gas increases alone. This fact was sometimes used to suggest that global warming had stopped or that it experienced a “hiatus” or “pause.” In reality, this phenomenon appears to have been influenced by several factors, none of which, however, implies that global warming stopped during this period or that global warming would not continue in the future. One factor was the increased burial of heat beneath the ocean surface by strong trade winds, a process assisted by La Niña conditions. The effects of La Niña manifest in the form of cooling surface waters along the western coast of South America. As a result, warming at the ocean surface was reduced, but the accumulation of heat in other parts of the ocean occurred at an accelerated rate. Another factor cited by climatologists was a small but potentially important increase in aerosols from volcanic activity, which may have blocked a small portion of incoming solar radiation and which were accompanied by a small reduction in solar output during the period. These factors, along with natural decades-long oscillations in the climate system, may have masked a portion of the greenhouse warming. (However, climatologists point out that these natural climate cycles are expected to add to greenhouse warming in the future when the oscillations eventually reverse direction.) For these reasons many scientists believe that it is an error to call this slowdown in detectable surface warming a “hiatus” or a “pause.”
Prehistorical climate records
In order to reconstruct climate changes that occurred prior to about the mid-19th century, it is necessary to use “proxy” measurements—that is, records of other natural phenomena that indirectly measure various climate conditions. Some proxies, such as most sediment cores and pollen records, glacial moraine evidence, and geothermal borehole temperature profiles, are coarsely resolved or dated and thus are only useful for describing climate changes on long timescales. Other proxies, such as growth rings from trees or oxygen isotopes from corals and ice cores, can provide a record of yearly or even seasonal climate changes.
The data from these proxies should be calibrated to known physical principles or related statistically to the records collected by modern instruments, such as satellites. Networks of proxy data can then be used to infer patterns of change in climate variables, such as the behaviour of surface temperature over time and geography. Yearly reconstructions of climate variables are possible over the past 1,000 to 2,000 years using annually dated proxy records, but reconstructions farther back in time are generally based on more coarsely resolved evidence such as ocean sediments and pollen records. For these, records of conditions can be reconstructed only on timescales of hundreds or thousands of years. In addition, since relatively few long-term proxy records are available for the Southern Hemisphere, most reconstructions focus on the Northern Hemisphere.
The various proxy-based reconstructions of the average surface temperature of the Northern Hemisphere differ in their details. These differences are the result of uncertainties implicit in the proxy data themselves and also of differences in the statistical methods used to relate the proxy data to surface temperature. Nevertheless, all studies as reviewed in the IPCC’s Fourth Assessment Report (AR4), which was published in 2007, indicate that the average surface temperature since about 1950 is higher than at any time during the previous 1,000 years.