Author Topic: New Paper: Geothermal Heat A Leading Driver Of Surface Temperatures  (Read 304 times)

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New Paper: Geothermal Heat A Leading Driver Of Surface Temperatures

By Kenneth Richard on 22. May 2017
Heat Flux From Below Melts Ice Sheets,
Drives Temperatures & CO2 Variations
 

It has long been established in the peer-reviewed scientific literature that naturally-driven fluctuations in the Earth’s surface temperature preceded the rise and fall of carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations for at least the last 800,000 years.

As oceans warm, they release more of their vast stores of CO2; as oceans cool, they retain more CO2.   During cold glacial periods, when ice sheets covered much of the Earth, atmospheric CO2 concentrations only hovered around 180 parts per million (ppm).  After surface temperatures naturally warmed up by multiple degrees C during interglacials, it took at least several hundred years before atmospheric CO2 concentrations began rising in response to the temperature rise.

This lag supports the conclusion that glacial-to-interglacial variations in CO2 concentrations may be driven by temperature changes, as the temperature change occurred well before the CO2 change did.
- See more at: http://notrickszone.com/2017/05/22/new-paper-geothermal-heat-a-leading-driver-of-surface-temperatures/#sthash.aqqjjtgR.dpuf