You
could walk by the house late in
the afternoon when the students might be outside and count them.
That
would be a direct measurement (this would be like measuring temperature
with a thermometer). There could still be some errors in your
measurement (some students might be inside the house and might not be
counted, some of
the people outside might not live at the house).
If you were to walk by early in the
morning it is likely that the
students would be inside sleeping (or in one of the 8 am NATS 101
classes). In that case you might
look for other clues (such as the number of empty bottles in the yard)
that might give you an idea of how many students
lived in that house. You would use these proxy data to come up
with an estimate of the number of students inside the house.
In the case of temperature scientists look
at a variety of
things. They could look at tree rings. The width of each
yearly ring depends on the depends on the temperature and
precipitation at the time the ring formed. They analyze
coral. Coral is made up of calcium carbonate, a molecule that
contains oxygen. The relative amounts of the oxygen-16 and
oxygen-18
isotopes depends
on the temperature that existed at the time the coral grew.
Scientists can analyze lake bed and ocean sediments. The types
of plant and animal fossils that they find depend on
the water temperature at the time. They can even use the ice
cores. The ice, H2O, contains oxygen and the relative
amounts of
various oxygen isotopes depends on the temperature at the time the ice
fell from the sky as snow.
Here's an idea of how oxygen isotope data
can be used to determine past
temperature.
The
two isotopes
of
oxygen contain different numbers of neutrons in their
nuclei. Both atoms have the same number of protons.
During a cold period,
the H2O16 form of water
evaporates more rapidly
than the H2O18 form. You would find
relatively large
amounts of O16 in glacial ice. Since most of the H2O18
remains in
the ocean, it is found in relatively high amounts in calcium carbonate
in ocean sediments.
The reverse is true
during warmer periods.
Using
proxy data
scientists have been able to estimate average
surface temperatures for 100,000s of years into the past. The
next figure (bottom of p. 3 in the photocopied Classnotes) shows what
temperature has been doing since 1000 AD.
This is for the northern hemisphere only, not the globe.
The
blue
portion of the figure shows the estimates of temperature (again
relative to the 1961-1990 mean) derived from proxy data. The red
portion is the instrumental
measurements made between about 1850 and the present day. There
is also a lot of year
to year variation and uncertainty that is not shown on the figure
above.
Many scientists would argue that this
graph is strong support of a
connection between rising atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations and
global warming. Early in this time interval when CO2
concentration was constant, there is little temperature change.
Temperature only begins to rise in about 1900 when we know an increase
in atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations was underway.
There is historical evidence in Europe of
a medieval warm period
lasting from 800 AD to - 1300 AD or so and a cold period, the "Little
Ice Age, " which lasted from about 1400 AD to the mid 1800s.
These are not clearly apparent in the temperature plot above.
This leads some scientists to question the validity of this temperature
reconstruction. Scientists also suggest that if large changes in
climate such as the Medieval warm period and the Little Ice Age can
occur naturally, then maybe the warming that is occurring at the
present time also has a natural cause.
Here's the figure that the sketch above
was based on
from
Climate
Change 2001 - The Scientific Basis
Contribution of Working Group I to the 3rd
Assessment Report of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC)
Here's a comparison of several
additional estimates of
temperature changes
over the past 1000 years or so
This is from the University of
East Anglia Climatic Research Unit again.
Some of these
curves do show a little bit more temperature variation between 1000 AD
and 1900 AD than the hockey stick plot above.
SUMMARY
There is general agreement that
Atmospheric CO2 and other greenhouse gas
concentrations are
increasing and that
The earth is warming
Not everyone agrees on
the Causes (natural or manmade) of the warming,
how much Additional Warming there will be, or
the Effects that warming will have on weather and
climate in the years to come