Long-Term Picture Offers Little Solace on Climate Change

Study looks back 20,000 years using recently collected carbon dioxide, global temperature, and sea level data spanning the last ice age

Written byUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison
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Climate change projections that look ahead one or two centuries show a rapid rise in temperature and sea level, but say little about the longer picture. Today (Feb. 8, 2016), a study published in Nature Climate Change looks at the next 10,000 years, and finds that the catastrophic impact of another three centuries of carbon pollution will persist millennia after the carbon dioxide releases cease.

The picture is disturbing, says co-author Shaun Marcott, an assistant professor of geoscience at the University of Wisconsin—Madison, with a nearly inevitable elevation of sea level for thousands of years into the future.

Related article: Assessing the Impact of Human-Induced Climate Change

Most climate projections now end at 2300 at the latest, “because that’s the time period most people are interested in,” says Marcott, a expert in glaciers and ancient climate. “Our idea was that this did not encapsulate the entire effect of adding one to five trillion tons of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere over the next three centuries. Whereas most studies look to the last 150 years of instrumental data and compare it to projections for the next few centuries, we looked back 20,000 years using recently collected carbon dioxide, global temperature, and sea level data spanning the last ice age. Then we compared past data to modeling results that extend 10,000 years into the future.”

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