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Climate Crash: Abrupt Climate Change and What It Means for Our Future

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Climate Crash

Abrupt Climate Change and What It Means for Our Future (2005)

As scientists carefully search for clues in the sun and storm patterns from our distant past, they are gradually writing a new history of Earth's climate. Layers extracted from cores drilled into glaciers and ice sheets, sediments collected from the shores of lakes and oceans, and growth rings exposed in ancient corals and trees all tell the same surprising story.

It is now apparent that alterations in our climate can happen quickly and dramatically. Physical evidence reveals that centuries of slow, creeping climate variations have actually been punctuated by far more rapid changes. While this new paradigm represents a significant shift in our picture of Earth's past, the real question is what it means for our future.

Many researchers are now quietly abandoning the traditional vision of a long, slow waltz of slumbering ice ages and more temperate periods of interglacial warming. While they've long recognized the threats posed by global warming, they must now consider that the natural behavior of our climate is perhaps a greater threat than we'd imagined. And though there is no need for immediate alarm, the fact that changes in our climate can happen much more quickly than we'd originally thought--perhaps in the course of a human lifetime--makes it clear that science has a lot of questions to answer in this area. What are the mechanisms for triggering a significant climate change? In what ways should we expect this change to manifest itself? When will it likely happen? Climate Crash seeks to answer these questions, breaking the story of rapid climate change to a general public that is already intensely curious about what science has to say on the topic.

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The views expressed in this book are solely those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Academies.

Author Bio

John D. Cox is a veteran journalist and author who has focused on hard news in the areas of science, environment, and politics. As an award-winning reporter, he has written extensively about such events as El Niño and such hotly debated climate issues as global warming and its ecological ramifications. The author of Storm Watchers and Weather for Dummies, he has mastered the art of explaining complexity in everyday terms. In 1995-1996, Cox was a Knight Science Journalism Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he studied atmospheric and other earth sciences.

Suggested Citation

John D. Cox. 2005. Climate Crash: Abrupt Climate Change and What It Means for Our Future. Washington, DC: Joseph Henry Press. https://doi.org/10.17226/10750.

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Publication Info

224 pages |  6 x 9 |  DOI: https://doi.org/10.17226/10750

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