http://news.wired.com/dynamic/stories/G/GLOBAL_WARMING_HUMIDITY?SITE=WIRE&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2007-10-10-20-32-24

http://tinyurl.com/2ek4w9




With global warming, the world isn't just getting hotter - it's 
getting stickier, due to humidity. And people are to blame, according 
to a study based on computer models published Thursday.
The amount of moisture in the air near Earth's surface rose 2.2 
percent in less than three decades, the researchers report in a study 
appearing in the journal Nature.

"This humidity change is an important contribution to heat stress in 
humans as a result of global warming," said Nathan Gillett of the 
University of East Anglia in the United Kingdom, a co-author of the 
study.

Gillett studied changes in specific humidity, which is a measurement 
of total moisture in the air, between 1973-2002. Higher humidity can 
be dangerous to people because it makes the body less efficient at 
cooling itself, said University of Miami health and climate researcher 
Laurence Kalkstein. He was not connected with the research.

Humidity increased over most of the globe, including the eastern 
United States, said study co-author Katharine Willett, a climate 
researcher at Yale University. However, a few regions, including the 
U.S. West, South Africa and parts of Australia were drier.

The finding isn't surprising to climate scientists. Physics dictates 
that warmer air can hold more moisture. But Gillett's study shows that 
the increase in humidity already is significant and can be attributed 
to gas emissions from the burning of fossil fuels.

To show that this is man-made, Gillett ran computer models to simulate 
past climate conditions and studied what would happen to humidity if 
there were no man-made greenhouse gases. It didn't match reality.

He looked at what would happen from just man-made greenhouse gases. 
That didn't match either. Then he looked at the combination of natural 
conditions and greenhouse gases. The results were nearly identical to 
the year-by-year increases in humidity.

Gillett's study followed another last month that used the same 
technique to show that moisture above the world's oceans increased and 
that it bore the "fingerprint" of being caused by man-made global 
warming.

Climate scientists have now seen the man-made fingerprint of global 
warming on 10 different aspects of Earth's environment: surface 
temperatures, humidity, water vapor over the oceans, barometric 
pressure, total precipitation, wildfires, change in species of plants 
in animals, water run-off, temperatures in the upper atmosphere, and 
heat content in the world's oceans.

"This story does now fit together; there are now no loose ends," said 
Ben Santer, a scientist at Lawrence Livermore National Lab and author 
of the September study on moisture above the oceans. "The message is 
pretty compelling that natural causes alone just can't cut it."

The studies make sense, said University of Victoria climate scientist 
Andrew Weaver, who was not part of either team's research.

It will only feel worse in the future, Gillett said. Moisture in the 
air increases by about 6 percent with every degree Celsius (1.8 
degrees Fahrenheit), he said. Using the Intergovernmental Panel on 
Climate Change's projections for temperature increases, that would 
mean a 12 to 24 percent increase in humidity by the year 2100.

"Although it might not be a lethal kind of thing, it's going to 
increase human discomfort," Willett said.



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