>From the Los Angeles Times
Global Warming -- Signed, Sealed and Delivered

Scientists agree: The Earth is warming, and human activities are the 
principal cause.

By Naomi Oreskes
NAOMI ORESKES is a history of science professor at UC San Diego.

July 24, 2006

AN OP-ED article in the Wall Street Journal a month ago claimed that 
a published study affirming the existence of a scientific consensus 
on the reality of global warming had been refuted. This charge was 
repeated again last week, in a hearing of the House Committee on 
Energy and Commerce.

I am the author of that study, which appeared two years ago in the 
journal Science, and I'm here to tell you that the consensus stands. 
The argument put forward in the Wall Street Journal was based on an 
Internet posting; it has not appeared in a peer-reviewed journal — 
the normal way to challenge an academic finding. (The Wall Street 
Journal didn't even get my name right!) 

My study demonstrated that there is no significant disagreement 
within the scientific community that the Earth is warming and that 
human activities are the principal cause. 

Papers that continue to rehash arguments that have already been 
addressed and questions that have already been answered will, of 
course, be rejected by scientific journals, and this explains my 
findings. Not a single paper in a large sample of peer-reviewed 
scientific journals between 1993 and 2003 refuted the consensus 
position, summarized by the National Academy of Sciences, that "most 
of the observed warming of the last 50 years is likely to have been 
due to the increase in greenhouse gas concentrations." 

Since the 1950s, scientists have understood that greenhouse gases 
produced by burning fossil fuels could have serious effects on 
Earth's climate. When the 1980s proved to be the hottest decade on 
record, and as predictions of climate models started to come true, 
scientists increasingly saw global warming as cause for concern....

To be sure, there are a handful of scientists, including MIT 
professor Richard Lindzen, the author of the Wall Street Journal 
editorial, who disagree with the rest of the scientific community. To 
a historian of science like me, this is not surprising. In any 
scientific community, there are always some individuals who simply 
refuse to accept new ideas and evidence. This is especially true when 
the new evidence strikes at their core beliefs and values....

A historical example will help to make the point. In the 1920s, the 
distinguished Cambridge geophysicist Harold Jeffreys rejected the 
idea of continental drift on the grounds of physical impossibility. 
In the 1950s, geologists and geophysicists began to accumulate 
overwhelming evidence of the reality of continental motion, even 
though the physics of it was poorly understood. By the late 1960s, 
the theory of plate tectonics was on the road to near-universal 
acceptance. 

Yet Jeffreys, by then Sir Harold, stubbornly refused to accept the 
new evidence, repeating his old arguments about the impossibility of 
the thing. He was a great man, but he had become a scientific mule. 
For a while, journals continued to publish Jeffreys' arguments, but 
after a while he had nothing new to say. He died denying plate 
tectonics. The scientific debate was over.... 

Read the entire op-ed at:
http://tinyurl.com/nofz5






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