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A palaeoclimate is the climate of the Earth at a specified point in geologic time.
We can see the bones. Also if the Skin or outer layer has been preserved then we can see how thick it was and that helps us with climate.
No. The 2004 tsunami was a geologic event unrelated to weather or climate.
None
Yes - solid-liquid-gas can be changed by temperature.
Ice blanketed much of North America, northern Europe, and northern Asia at one time. That is pretty good evidence of a dramatic change in climate. There have been numerous ice ages, as revealed by rock strata and oxygen isotope ratios. Fossil evidence of rainforest organisms buried in what is now desert also reveal substantial changes in climate over geologic time.
There are fossils of tropical rainforest plants in areas that are now dry desert. Either the land has moved (which has also happened), or the climate changed. This is one of the most obvious bits of evidence for past climate change, but there are numerous others.
The area used to have ample water and a river to irrigate crops. When the climate changed, many people moved. There is other evidence to show that there were some violent times and there was evidence that a significant number of people had leprosy.
A palaeoclimate is the climate of the Earth at a specified point in geologic time.
There are fossils of tropical rainforest plants in areas that are now dry desert. Either the land has moved (which has also happened), or the climate changed. This is one of the most obvious bits of evidence for past climate change, but there are numerous others.
Hurricanes have a cause rooted in weather. They can be influenced by geographic formations and there is some evidence that human induced climate change can influence them as well, but not cause them.
Geo-Strata not only occur in Earth, they are equally applicable in Ice Cores.
The Sahara Desert is balancing the climate that exists in other parts of Africa. In the geologic past, parts of the desert had a wetter climate.
The best evidence you have of past climate is written almanacs and weather reports. Almanacs have been kept for centuries and well document the climate.
We can see the bones. Also if the Skin or outer layer has been preserved then we can see how thick it was and that helps us with climate.
No. The 2004 tsunami was a geologic event unrelated to weather or climate.
Fossils were found that might not have matched that certain climate.