Variations in Earth’s
position, known as Milankovitch cycles, combine to produce cyclical changes in
the global climate. These cycles are believed to be responsible for the
repeated advance and retreat of glaciers and ice sheets during the Pleistocene
Epoch (1.8 million to 11,500 years before present), when Earth went through
fairly regular cycles of colder “glacial” periods (also known as ice ages) and
warmer “interglacial” periods. Glacial periods occurred at roughly 100,000-year
intervals.
An interglacial period began
about 10,000 years ago, when the last ice age came to an end. Prior to that ice
age, an interglacial period occurred about 125,000 years ago.
During interglacial periods, greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide
and methane naturally increase in the atmosphere from increased plant and
animal life. But since 1750 greenhouse gases have increased dramatically to
levels not seen in hundreds of thousands of years, due to the rapid growth of
the human population combined with developments in technology and agriculture.
Human activities now are a powerful factor influencing Earth’s dynamic climate.
The ice of the polar regions
furnishes clues to the makeup of Earth’s ancient atmosphere. Ice cores that
scientists have bored from the ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica provide
natural records of both temperature and atmospheric greenhouse gases going back
hundreds of thousands of years. Layers in these ice cores created by seasonal
snowfall patterns allow scientists to determine the age of the ice in each
core. By measuring tiny air bubbles trapped in the ice and properties of the
ice itself, scientists can estimate the temperature and amount of greenhouse
gases in Earth’s past atmosphere at the time each layer formed. Based on this
data, scientists know that greenhouse gases have now risen to levels higher
than at any time in the last 650,000 years.
Greenhouse gases are rising,
and temperatures are following. Before the late 1800s,
the average surface temperature of Earth was almost 15°C (59°F).
Over the past 100 years, the average surface temperature has risen by about 0.7
Celsius degrees (1.3 Fahrenheit degrees), with most of the increase occurring
since the 1970s. Scientists have linked even this amount of warming to numerous
changes taking place around the world, including melting mountain glaciers and
polar ice, rising sea level, more intense and longer droughts, more intense
storms, more frequent heat waves, and changes in the life cycles of many plants
and animals. Warming has been most dramatic in the Arctic, where temperatures
have risen almost twice as much as the global average.
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