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Global warming 55
million years
ago suggests a high climate sensitivity to carbon dioxide, according to
research led by Mark Pagani,
associate professor of geology and geophysics
at Yale and published in the December 8 issue of Science.
For some years,
scientists have
known that a massive release of carbon into the atmosphere caused the
ancient
global warming event known as the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum
(PETM) that
began about 55 million years ago. The geologic record shows that the
resulting
greenhouse effect heated the planet as a whole by about 9°F
(5°C), in less than
10,000 years. That temperature
increase lasted
about 170,000 years, altered the world’s rainfall patterns,
made the oceans
acidic, affected plant and animal life in the seas and on land, and
spawned the
rise of our modern primate ancestors. "The PETM is a
stunning
example of carbon dioxide-induced global warming and stands in contrast
to
critics who argue that the Earth’s temperature is insensitive
to increases in
carbon dioxide," said Pagani. "Not only did the Earth warm by at
least 9°F (5°C), but it did so during a time when
Earth’s average temperature
was already 9°F warmer than today." However, what has
not been clear
is how much carbon was responsible for the temperature increase and
where it
came from. Scientists have speculated that it might have come from
massive
fires from burning coal and other ancient plant material, or from
‘burps’ of
methane from the continental shelves that rapidly became atmospheric
carbon
dioxide. "According to this
work, if
the PETM was caused by the burning of plant material then climate
sensitivity
to carbon dioxide is more than 4.5°F (2.5°C) per carbon
dioxide doubling. And
if methane was the culprit, then Earth’s climate must be
extremely sensitive to
carbon dioxide — increasing, over 10°F
(5.6°C) per carbon dioxide
doubling," noted Pagani. This finding
contradicts the
position held by many climate-change skeptics that the
Earth’s climate is
resilient to such carbon dioxide emissions and suggests that
Earth’s
temperature will rise substantially with atmospheric carbon dioxide
concentrations that are expected to double around mid-century. "The last time
carbon was
emitted to the atmosphere on the scale of what we are doing today,
there were
winners and losers," remarked Ken Caldeira, a co-author from the
Carnegie
Institution’s Department of Global Ecology. "There was
ecological
devastation, but new species rose from the ashes. Our work provides
even more
incentive to develop the clean energy sources that can provide for
economic
growth and development without risking the natural world that is our
endowment."
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