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Vital Climate
Graphics : Introduction to
climate change Next: The greenhouse
effect

2. Over the last 400,000 years the Earth's climate has been unstable,
with very significant temperature changes, going from a warm climate to an
ice age in as rapidly as a few decades. These rapid changes suggest that
climate may be quite sensitive to internal or external climate forcings
and feedbacks. As can be seen from the blue curve, temperatures have been
less variable during the last 10 000 years. Based on the incomplete
evidence available, it is unlikely that global mean temperatures have
varied by more than 1°C in a century during this period. The information
presented on this graph indicates a strong correlation between carbon
dioxide content in the atmosphere and temperature. A possible scenario:
anthropogenic emissions of GHGs could bring the climate to a state where
it reverts to the highly unstable climate of the pre-ice age period.
Rather than a linear evolution, the climate follows a non-linear path with
sudden and dramatic surprises when GHG levels reach an as-yet unknown
trigger point. |