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Feature/The climate of the future: clues from three million years ago

机译:功能/未来气候:三百万年前的线索

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James Hutton is generally regarded as the father of modern geology. In the eighteenth century he came up with a theory that revolutionized the science of geology: uniformitarianism, expressed by Charles Lyell as 'The present is a key to the past'. This has enabled generations of geologists to interpret information gleaned from rocks and sediments by reference to examples existing in the modern environment. Although this remains a corner stone of geology, could the past also be a guide to our future? Certainty this would not surprise an historian; consider the old saying 'history always repeats itself. Nonetheless, in geology it is an idea that is only now being fully explored. The driving force behind this new adventure is the changing climate of our planet and our desire to understand, predict and mitigate the effects of future climate change. According to the latest report produced by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, our planet is running a temperature. Within the next 150 to 350 years, Earth will warm by an extent not seen for millions of years. This warming is a result of the emission of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide (CO_2) and methane (CH_4) into the atmosphere. Rapid climate change has become the disaster scenario for the twenty-first century. Be it cities deluged by giant waves, paradise islands sinking into the oceans, or the corals of the Great Barrier Reef heated-up to extinction, everyone is aware that climate change can have a dramatic effect on the world we live in. In the recent Hollywood movie The Day After Tomorrow, New York was frozen solid as the climate of the Northern Hemisphere took a dramatic turn for the worse. But what evidence do we have for climate change in the past, and how can we use the information stored in the geological record to help us predict what our climate and environment might be like in the future? One of the best places to look is the world of the mid-Pliocene, three million years ago. The mid-Pliocene is the last time in geological history when our planet's climate was significantly warmer, for a prolonged period, than it is today. So what was the mid Pliocene world like?
机译:詹姆斯·赫顿(James Hutton)通常被认为是现代地质之父。在18世纪,他提出了一种革命性的地质学理论:查尔斯·莱尔(Charles Lyell)表示“现在是过去的关键”的均势主义。这使几代地质学家能够参考现代环境中存在的实例来解释从岩石和沉积物中收集的信息。尽管这仍然是地质学的基石,但过去是否也可以指导我们的未来?当然,这不会让历史学家感到惊讶。考虑一句老话:“历史总是在重复。但是,在地质学中,这个想法直到现在才被充分探索。这项新冒险背后的驱动力是地球气候的变化以及我们了解,预测和减轻未来气候变化影响的愿望。根据政府间气候变化专门委员会的最新报告,我们的星球正在升温。在接下来的150到350年中,地球将以数百万年来未见的程度变暖。这种变暖是温室气体如二氧化碳(CO_2)和甲烷(CH_4)排放到大气中的结果。迅速的气候变化已成为二十一世纪的灾难。无论是被巨浪淹没的城市,沉入海洋的天堂岛,还是大堡礁的珊瑚逐渐灭绝,每个人都意识到气候变化可以对我们所生活的世界产生巨大影响。好莱坞电影《明日之后》,北半球的气候急剧恶化,纽约结冰。但是,过去我们对气候变化有什么证据?如何利用地质记录中存储的信息来帮助我们预测未来的气候和环境?最好看的地方之一是三百万年前的上新世中期。上新世中期是地质历史上的最后一次,地球的气候比今天持续了很长时间。那么中新世世界是什么样的呢?

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