Climate History

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Climate History

Climate History

@ClimateHist

The Climate History Network. We pursue interdisciplinary research on the history of #ClimateChange, to better understand both the past and the future.

Entrou em Kasım 2014
1.2K Seguindo2.4K Seguidores
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Jeremy DeHart
Jeremy DeHart@JeremyDeHartWX·
From a crewmember on yesterday's Teal 74 mission into now-Category 5 Hurricane #Melissa. As clear of an eye as you will see in the Atlantic basin.
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Climate History
Climate History@ClimateHist·
What are the archives of nature? How do they help us identify, or "reconstruct," the history of environmental change? Dagomar Degroot explains in this short video, part of a series that introduces his new book, "Ripples on the Cosmic Ocean." #ClimateChange youtube.com/watch?v=Nakwu8…
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Prof. Stefan Rahmstorf 🌏 🦣
I was shocked when I first saw these results from standard climate models used in IPCC reports: for high emissions, the Atlantic overturning circulation #AMOC shuts down in all 9 models that ran past 2100, and is well on the way to shutdown by 2100. Our paper is out today. 🧵
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The SETI Institute
The SETI Institute@SETIInstitute·
PODCAST: buff.ly/QDKCeBg How has climate change influenced humanity’s past? What can history tell us about the future? Find out in The Climate Chronicles, a podcast written, produced, and narrated by Professor Dagomar Degroot of @Georgetown University. In the second episode of the first season, “Becoming Human,” Professor Degroot explains the dramatic cooling of our planet that began about 45 million years ago and how life adapted, including humanity’s distant ancestors.
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The SETI Institute
The SETI Institute@SETIInstitute·
PODCAST: buff.ly/4gZm1JP How has climate change influenced humanity’s past? What can history tell us about the future? Find out in The Climate Chronicles, a podcast written, produced, and narrated by Professor Dagomar Degroot of @Georgetown University. The second episode of The Climate Chronicles is also the first episode of the podcast’s first season, “Becoming Human.” In this episode, Professor Degroot explores the far-fetched possibility that humanity might not be the first intelligent species to overheat the Earth. He explains how scientists piece together the deep history of climate change on Earth.
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The SETI Institute
The SETI Institute@SETIInstitute·
PODCAST: buff.ly/4gIX9pB How has climate change influenced humanity’s past? What can history tell us about the future? Find out in The Climate Chronicles, a podcast written, produced, and narrated by Professor Dagomar Degroot of @Georgetown University. In the introductory episode of The Climate Chronicles, Professor Degroot uses one of the great adventure stories of the seventeenth century – the tale of fourteen men deserted on two Arctic islands – to introduce the history of climate change.
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Climate History
Climate History@ClimateHist·
Please follow The Climate Chronicles wherever you get your podcasts, or visit TheClimateChronicles.com. And please share the word – we hope to reach as many people as possible! #EnvHist (5/5)
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Climate History@ClimateHist·
Degroot has published the introductory episode, as well as the first episode of the first season, “Becoming Human.” For the next month, he'll publish an episode every week until the first season reaches its conclusion. (4/5)
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History of Meteorology
History of Meteorology@HistMeteorology·
CFP: Climate and Migration: Historical and Present Perspectives Brno, Czech Republic: 3.–4. June 2024 Call for abstracts: 18 February 2024 Acceptance decision: 15 March 2024 See this link for more details: geogr.sci.muni.cz/en/climatology…
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Ed Hawkins
Ed Hawkins@ed_hawkins·
Well done to @meteofrance for *finally* making their historical weather station data free and open access - all the way back to the 1770s: meteo.data.gouv.fr/datasets
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Ruth Morgan
Ruth Morgan@ruthamorgan·
UK friends! I'll be talking about Australia, the Pacific and climate change this Wednesday, Nov 1 - see below for details! #envhist #climhist
ANU Australian Studies Institute@ANUausi

Next week #ANUExpert A/Prof @ruthamorgan will deliver the @KingsAusInst Annual Reese Lecture on the topic of 'Negotiating a warming world: Australia, the Pacific and climate change since the 1980s'. #AUResearch #AustralianStudies kcl.ac.uk/events/negotia…

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Climate History@ClimateHist·
This call for papers (deadline 31 October 2023) may be of interest to some of you: the International conference "Nordic Climate History. Learning from the Past" takes place in Oslo, Norway, 23–24 May 2024. hf.uio.no/iakh/english/r… #climhist #envhist
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Ed Hawkins
Ed Hawkins@ed_hawkins·
Now @NASA use the climate spiral to communicate how unusual global temperatures were in July 2023. I made the original version in 2016 which was featured in the opening ceremony of the Rio Olympics.
NASA@NASA

July 2023 was the hottest month on record, according to our global temperature analysis. Overall, July was 0.43°F (0.24°C) warmer than any other July in @NASAEarth's record, and it's likely due to human activity. Details: go.nasa.gov/3OTWMh7

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Zeke Hausfather
Zeke Hausfather@hausfath·
BREAKING: June 2023 has blown away all prior records for the month of June, coming in at a staggering 0.16C above the prior record set in 2019. It was around 1.46C above the typical temperatures we saw in June in the preindustrial era (1850-1899).
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