Carolyn Snyder's doctoral, dissertation shows earth is its hottest for two million years. |
As part of her doctoral dissertation at Stanford University,
Carolyn Snyder, now a climate policy official at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, created a continuous 2 million year temperature record, much
longer than a previous 22,000 year record. Snyder’s temperature reconstruction,
published Monday in the journal Nature, doesn’t estimate temperature for a
single year, but averages 5,000-year time periods going back a couple million
years.
Snyder based her reconstruction on 61 different sea surface
temperature proxies from across the globe, such as ratios between magnesium and
calcium, species makeup and acidity. But the further the study goes back in
time, especially after half a million years, the fewer of those proxies are
available, making the estimates less certain, she said.
Read the CBSNews
story - “Study: Earth now the warmest it's been in 120,000 years.”
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