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Less sea ice covered the Arctic Ocean
The minimum time scale used by climate scientists is five years. This is why most of their data is represented by seasonal measurements (to indicate the extent of noise) and a five year running average to chart climate trends. Natural climate change during most of the Cenozoic has occurred over a hundred thousand year cycle known as the Milankovich Cycle. This has been earth's primary driver of climate for many millions of years.
Yes. Climate is an overall average of the weather over a very long time. Weather can change in an instant, but because there are so many data points that are combined to determine climate, you need a lot of change before the dataset has any measurable difference.
The measure that captures the average weather of an area over 25-30 years is called climate. Climate is determined by analyzing long-term weather data, including temperature, rainfall, humidity, wind patterns, and other meteorological factors. By studying climate data over a significant period, scientists can identify patterns and trends that help characterize the typical conditions of a particular region.
The bulk of this loss is blamed on global warming, inferring that man is involved. The current warming trend started 11,500 years ago according to Greenland data and commonly accepted scientific data. The data we have for the arctic only started a very short time ago and it is quite possible this small volume of loss is within the normal variations of the area.
Less sea ice covered the Arctic Ocean
online database of climate data
Remote sensing makes it possible to collect data on dangerous or inaccessible areas. This includes monitoring deforestation in areas such as the Amazon Basin, the effects of climate change on the Arctic and Antarctic regions.
Index Fossils- Shows what kind of climate was there thousands of years ago.
The InterGovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is made up of scientists around the world. They gather data and experiments from everywhere and analyse them to find out the facts about climate change.
The minimum time scale used by climate scientists is five years. This is why most of their data is represented by seasonal measurements (to indicate the extent of noise) and a five year running average to chart climate trends. Natural climate change during most of the Cenozoic has occurred over a hundred thousand year cycle known as the Milankovich Cycle. This has been earth's primary driver of climate for many millions of years.
Ice cores drilled in Antarctica -- and in many other ice sheets throughout the world -- can be analyzed in the lab for the atmospheric contents present during the period when the ice froze. These data give scientists treasure troves of data that have to do with climate and climate change over tens of thousands of years of Earth's atmospheric history.
Index Fossils- Shows what kind of climate was there thousands of years ago.
Yes. Climate is an overall average of the weather over a very long time. Weather can change in an instant, but because there are so many data points that are combined to determine climate, you need a lot of change before the dataset has any measurable difference.
The measure that captures the average weather of an area over 25-30 years is called climate. Climate is determined by analyzing long-term weather data, including temperature, rainfall, humidity, wind patterns, and other meteorological factors. By studying climate data over a significant period, scientists can identify patterns and trends that help characterize the typical conditions of a particular region.
Yes, Pollution. No, Scientific research and data on wildlife and climate change.
They use actual data gathered from previous weather patterns, temperatures and other information.