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The Detection and Attribution of Northern Hemisphere Land Surface Warming (1850–2018) in Terms of Human and Natural Factors: Challenges of Inadequate Data

Title
The Detection and Attribution of Northern Hemisphere Land Surface Warming (1850–2018) in Terms of Human and Natural Factors: Challenges of Inadequate Data
Authors
Soon W.Connolly R.Connolly M.Akasofu S.-I.Baliunas S.Berglund J.Bianchini A.Briggs W.M.Butler C.J.Cionco R.G.Crok M.Elias A.G.Fedorov V.M.Gervais F.Harde H.Henry G.W.Hoyt D.V.Humlum O.Legates D.R.Lupo A.R.Maruyama S.Moore P.Ogurtsov M.ÓhAiseadha C.Oliveira M.J.Park S.-S.Qiu S.Quinn G.Scafetta N.Solheim J.-E.Steele J.Szarka L.Tanaka H.L.Taylor M.K.Vahrenholt F.Velasco Herrera V.M.Zhang W.
Ewha Authors
박석순
SCOPUS Author ID
박석순scopusscopus
Issue Date
2023
Journal Title
Climate
ISSN
2225-1154JCR Link
Citation
Climate vol. 11, no. 9
Keywords
anthropogenic forcingdetection and attribution of climate changeglobal warmingnatural forcingthermometer recordsurbanization bias
Publisher
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)
Indexed
SCOPUS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
A statistical analysis was applied to Northern Hemisphere land surface temperatures (1850–2018) to try to identify the main drivers of the observed warming since the mid-19th century. Two different temperature estimates were considered—a rural and urban blend (that matches almost exactly with most current estimates) and a rural-only estimate. The rural and urban blend indicates a long-term warming of 0.89 °C/century since 1850, while the rural-only indicates 0.55 °C/century. This contradicts a common assumption that current thermometer-based global temperature indices are relatively unaffected by urban warming biases. Three main climatic drivers were considered, following the approaches adopted by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)’s recent 6th Assessment Report (AR6): two natural forcings (solar and volcanic) and the composite “all anthropogenic forcings combined” time series recommended by IPCC AR6. The volcanic time series was that recommended by IPCC AR6. Two alternative solar forcing datasets were contrasted. One was the Total Solar Irradiance (TSI) time series that was recommended by IPCC AR6. The other TSI time series was apparently overlooked by IPCC AR6. It was found that altering the temperature estimate and/or the choice of solar forcing dataset resulted in very different conclusions as to the primary drivers of the observed warming. Our analysis focused on the Northern Hemispheric land component of global surface temperatures since this is the most data-rich component. It reveals that important challenges remain for the broader detection and attribution problem of global warming: (1) urbanization bias remains a substantial problem for the global land temperature data; (2) it is still unclear which (if any) of the many TSI time series in the literature are accurate estimates of past TSI; (3) the scientific community is not yet in a position to confidently establish whether the warming since 1850 is mostly human-caused, mostly natural, or some combination. Suggestions for how these scientific challenges might be resolved are offered. © 2023 by the authors.
DOI
10.3390/cli11090179
Appears in Collections:
공과대학 > 환경공학과 > Journal papers
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