By environment correspondent Alex Kirby
Two British scientists say the level of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the Earth's
atmosphere is higher than for 20 million years.

But their study of levels over the last 60 million years suggests that the
gas was once even more abundant than it is today.

Carbon dioxide is the main gas caused by human activity that has been linked
to global warming. Concentrations now are about 360 ppm (parts per million),
but will continue to rise as emissions increase.

Based on current trends, by 2030 the total climatic impact of rising levels
of all greenhouse gases will be equal to that caused by the doubling of
pre-industrial CO2 concentrations. By 2100, the effect would be trebled.

The research, by Dr Paul Pearson of the University of Bristol and Professor
Martin Palmer, of Imperial College, London, is reported in the journal
Nature.

Shelling out

They used a new technique to establish CO2 levels in the ancient atmosphere,
analysing the shells of planktonic organisms that once lived near the
surface of the ocean.

This enabled them to establish past seawater acidity, which in turn was
dictated by the amount of atmospheric CO2.

The researchers estimate that between about 60 and 52 million years ago, CO2
concentrations reached more than 2,000 ppm.

But from about 55 to 40 million years ago, there was "an erratic decline",
which may have been caused by a reduction in CO2 emissions from ocean ridges
and volcanoes, and by increased carbon burial.

Since about 24 million years ago, concentrations appear to have remained
below 500 ppm and were more stable than before, although transient intervals
of CO2 reduction may have occurred during periods of rapid cooling
approximately 15 and 3 million years ago.

"Our observations put the modern greenhouse effect into a long-term
perspective," said Dr Pearson.

Back to the future

Commenting on the prospect suggested by climate models, that the 2100 CO2
level could be as high as that last seen in the Eocene period, 50 million
years ago, he said: "This does not necessarily mean we will recreate
Eocene-type conditions.

"There are still too many unknowns involved in climate prediction. But the
sweltering ice-free world of the Eocene does warn us of what might happen if
a runaway greenhouse effects sets in."

Some researchers still doubt that human activities are inducing rapid
climate change. They highlight the inconsistencies between the temperature
records taken at the Earth's surface, which show rapid warming over the last
century, and the data produced by satellite and balloon studies.

These show little if any warming, in the last two decades, of the low to
mid-troposphere - the atmospheric layer extending up to about 8 km from the
Earth's surface.

Climate models generally predict that temperatures should increase in the
upper air as well as at the surface if increased concentrations of
greenhouse gases are causing the warming recorded at ground level.

   BBC News Online





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