lomiller
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2007
- Messages
- 13,208
What temperature increase is that exactly? According to the best studies I can find they show a .7C rise over the last 1000 years.
So a 0.3 deg drop over 900 years + a 1 deg increase over another 100 is “a 0.7 deg increase over 1000 years”

There is a statistically significant trend of 0.17 deg per decade since 1970. Whatever the trend was before this, that’s where the trend sits now.
There is no evidence for any change in this trend, rather you have listened to questionable sources who cherry picked starting and ending years to calculate a trend that turns out not to be statistically significant. Don’t just believe whatever random stuff you find on the internet, you need to apply some critical thinking or you will always end up falling for woo like this.
Couple that fact with the well known (at least to historians and archaeologists) warming and cooling periods where the temps were correspondingly higher and then lower and now rising again and you have a wonderfully stable period. This last 10,000 years has been truly remarkable for its consistency. The holocene thermal maximum was a minimum 3C warmer than today and all of the horrible things the
False. The Holocene maximum was comparable top today, possibly slightly warmer but the uncertainly is such that it’s not possible to conclusively say it was warmer (or cooler). It’s been ~125 000 years since the earth was warmer that 20th century norms, but that’s usually taken to mean circa 1950 and we’ve warmed since then.
BTW, information on the timing and magnitude of the Holocene optimum doesn’t come from “historians and archaeologists” it comes from climatologists, the same climatologists you conveniently ignore when they talk about current warming
"Abstract
The magnitude and timing of Holocene maximum warmth in the Arctic and sub-Arctic has been the subject of considerable recent interest, particularly in the context of future climate change. Although lying at a crucial location in the North Atlantic close to significant atmospheric and oceanic boundaries, terrestrial Holocene climatic data from Iceland are few and predominantly derive from glacial and palaeoecological evidence. Here we present new datasets from Tröllaskagi, based on chironomid-inferred temperatures (CI-T), using sub-fossil chironomids from the same lake sediments supplemented by pollen data. July air temperatures have been derived using an Icelandic training set, and the data suggest optimal temperatures at sea level up to 1.5 °C above current levels around 8 k cal. yr BP, a time when birch woodland was well developed in Tröllaskagi
This is a local temperature proxy form a region that varies more greatly than global temperatures. It also specifies BP = before present which in climate papers typically refers to temperatures circa 1950. They later refer specifically to 1961-1990 average , but it’s not clear if this is how they are defining “present day”. Either way temperatures in 2010+ are already significantly greater than their comparison point, so it’s not at all clear that this area was warmer during the Holocene optimum.