Warm climates of the pasta lesson for the future?

This Discussion Meeting Issue of the Philosophical Transactions A had its genesis in a Discussion Meeting of the Royal Society which took place on 10-11 October 2011. The Discussion Meeting, entitled 'Warm climates of the past: a lesson for the future?', brought together 16 eminent interna...

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Main Authors: Lunt, DJ, Elderfield, H, Pancost, R, Ridgwell, A, Foster, GL, Haywood, A, Kiehl, J, Sagoo, N, Shields, C, Stone, EJ, Valdes, P
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2xq1s64z
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt2xq1s64z 2023-10-01T03:56:43+02:00 Warm climates of the pasta lesson for the future? Lunt, DJ Elderfield, H Pancost, R Ridgwell, A Foster, GL Haywood, A Kiehl, J Sagoo, N Shields, C Stone, EJ Valdes, P 20130146 2013-10-28 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2xq1s64z unknown eScholarship, University of California qt2xq1s64z https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2xq1s64z public Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences, vol 371, iss 2001 Climate Action palaeoclimate future climate modelling proxy data General Science & Technology article 2013 ftcdlib 2023-09-04T18:02:57Z This Discussion Meeting Issue of the Philosophical Transactions A had its genesis in a Discussion Meeting of the Royal Society which took place on 10-11 October 2011. The Discussion Meeting, entitled 'Warm climates of the past: a lesson for the future?', brought together 16 eminent international speakers from the field of palaeoclimate, and was attended by over 280 scientists and members of the public. Many of the speakers have contributed to the papers compiled in this Discussion Meeting Issue. The papers summarize the talks at the meeting, and present further or related work. This Discussion Meeting Issue asks to what extent information gleaned from the study of past climates can aid our understanding of future climate change. Climate change is currently an issue at the forefront of environmental science, and also has important sociological and political implications. Most future predictions are carried out by complex numerical models; however, these models cannot be rigorously tested for scenarios outside of the modern, without making use of past climate data. Furthermore, past climate data can inform our understanding of how the Earth system operates, and can provide important contextual information related to environmental change. All past time periods can be useful in this context; here, we focus on past climates that were warmer than the modern climate, as these are likely to be the most similar to the future. This introductory paper is not meant as a comprehensive overview of all work in this field. Instead, it gives an introduction to the important issues therein, using the papers in this Discussion Meeting Issue, and other works from all the Discussion Meeting speakers, as exemplars of the various ways in which past climates can inform projections of future climate. Furthermore, we present new work that uses a palaeo constraint to quantitatively inform projections of future equilibrium ice sheet change. Article in Journal/Newspaper Ice Sheet University of California: eScholarship
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic Climate Action
palaeoclimate
future climate
modelling
proxy data
General Science & Technology
spellingShingle Climate Action
palaeoclimate
future climate
modelling
proxy data
General Science & Technology
Lunt, DJ
Elderfield, H
Pancost, R
Ridgwell, A
Foster, GL
Haywood, A
Kiehl, J
Sagoo, N
Shields, C
Stone, EJ
Valdes, P
Warm climates of the pasta lesson for the future?
topic_facet Climate Action
palaeoclimate
future climate
modelling
proxy data
General Science & Technology
description This Discussion Meeting Issue of the Philosophical Transactions A had its genesis in a Discussion Meeting of the Royal Society which took place on 10-11 October 2011. The Discussion Meeting, entitled 'Warm climates of the past: a lesson for the future?', brought together 16 eminent international speakers from the field of palaeoclimate, and was attended by over 280 scientists and members of the public. Many of the speakers have contributed to the papers compiled in this Discussion Meeting Issue. The papers summarize the talks at the meeting, and present further or related work. This Discussion Meeting Issue asks to what extent information gleaned from the study of past climates can aid our understanding of future climate change. Climate change is currently an issue at the forefront of environmental science, and also has important sociological and political implications. Most future predictions are carried out by complex numerical models; however, these models cannot be rigorously tested for scenarios outside of the modern, without making use of past climate data. Furthermore, past climate data can inform our understanding of how the Earth system operates, and can provide important contextual information related to environmental change. All past time periods can be useful in this context; here, we focus on past climates that were warmer than the modern climate, as these are likely to be the most similar to the future. This introductory paper is not meant as a comprehensive overview of all work in this field. Instead, it gives an introduction to the important issues therein, using the papers in this Discussion Meeting Issue, and other works from all the Discussion Meeting speakers, as exemplars of the various ways in which past climates can inform projections of future climate. Furthermore, we present new work that uses a palaeo constraint to quantitatively inform projections of future equilibrium ice sheet change.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lunt, DJ
Elderfield, H
Pancost, R
Ridgwell, A
Foster, GL
Haywood, A
Kiehl, J
Sagoo, N
Shields, C
Stone, EJ
Valdes, P
author_facet Lunt, DJ
Elderfield, H
Pancost, R
Ridgwell, A
Foster, GL
Haywood, A
Kiehl, J
Sagoo, N
Shields, C
Stone, EJ
Valdes, P
author_sort Lunt, DJ
title Warm climates of the pasta lesson for the future?
title_short Warm climates of the pasta lesson for the future?
title_full Warm climates of the pasta lesson for the future?
title_fullStr Warm climates of the pasta lesson for the future?
title_full_unstemmed Warm climates of the pasta lesson for the future?
title_sort warm climates of the pasta lesson for the future?
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2013
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2xq1s64z
op_coverage 20130146
genre Ice Sheet
genre_facet Ice Sheet
op_source Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences, vol 371, iss 2001
op_relation qt2xq1s64z
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2xq1s64z
op_rights public
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