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A Reconstruction of Regional and Global Temperature for the Past 11,300 Years

by: Shaun A. Marcott, Jeremy D. Shakun, Peter U. Clark, Alan C. Mix
Science, Vol. 339, No. 6124. (08 March 2013), pp. 1198-1201, doi:10.1126/science.1228026  Key: citeulike:12124183

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Abstract

The climate has been warming since the industrial revolution, but how warm is climate now compared with the rest of the Holocene? Marcott et al. (p. 1198) constructed a record of global mean surface temperature for more than the last 11,000 years, using a variety of land- and marine-based proxy data from all around the world. The pattern of temperatures shows a rise as the world emerged from the last deglaciation, warm conditions until the middle of the Holocene, and a cooling trend over the next 5000 years that culminated around 200 years ago in the Little Ice Age. Temperatures have risen steadily since then, leaving us now with a global temperature higher than those during 90% of the entire Holocene.


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