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      Robust global ocean cooling trend for the pre-industrial Common Era

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          Most cited references37

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          Long-Term Variations of Daily Insolation and Quaternary Climatic Changes

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            Analyses of global sea surface temperature 1856-1991

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              Causes of climate change over the past 1000 years

              Crowley (2000)
              Recent reconstructions of Northern Hemisphere temperatures and climate forcing over the past 1000 years allow the warming of the 20th century to be placed within a historical context and various mechanisms of climate change to be tested. Comparisons of observations with simulations from an energy balance climate model indicate that as much as 41 to 64% of preanthropogenic (pre-1850) decadal-scale temperature variations was due to changes in solar irradiance and volcanism. Removal of the forced response from reconstructed temperature time series yields residuals that show similar variability to those of control runs of coupled models, thereby lending support to the models' value as estimates of low-frequency variability in the climate system. Removal of all forcing except greenhouse gases from the approximately 1000-year time series results in a residual with a very large late-20th-century warming that closely agrees with the response predicted from greenhouse gas forcing. The combination of a unique level of temperature increase in the late 20th century and improved constraints on the role of natural variability provides further evidence that the greenhouse effect has already established itself above the level of natural variability in the climate system. A 21st-century global warming projection far exceeds the natural variability of the past 1000 years and is greater than the best estimate of global temperature change for the last interglacial.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Nature Geoscience
                Nature Geosci
                Springer Nature
                1752-0894
                1752-0908
                September 2015
                August 17 2015
                : 8
                : 9
                : 671-677
                Article
                10.1038/ngeo2510
                8aeea2d0-54d5-43ea-850f-f99d624515f6
                © 2015

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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