The China Mail - Current carbon dioxide levels last seen 14 million years ago

USD -
AED 3.67295
AFN 70.219413
ALL 87.374283
AMD 389.04246
ANG 1.80229
AOA 914.999669
ARS 1112.505103
AUD 1.561625
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.697116
BAM 1.738435
BBD 2.018337
BDT 121.453999
BGN 1.73917
BHD 0.376914
BIF 2973.747717
BMD 1
BND 1.297726
BOB 6.907279
BRL 5.656006
BSD 0.999613
BTN 85.311254
BWP 13.553823
BYN 3.271247
BYR 19600
BZD 2.00792
CAD 1.39161
CDF 2874.999694
CHF 0.831099
CLF 0.024339
CLP 933.999948
CNY 7.22535
CNH 7.240805
COP 4252.17
CRC 507.357483
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 98.010284
CZK 22.164001
DJF 177.997813
DKK 6.62898
DOP 58.815948
DZD 133.086242
EGP 50.6122
ERN 15
ETB 134.119791
EUR 0.888555
FJD 2.270702
FKP 0.752798
GBP 0.75305
GEL 2.755044
GGP 0.752798
GHS 13.144071
GIP 0.752798
GMD 71.484889
GNF 8656.619572
GTQ 7.68865
GYD 209.738061
HKD 7.77801
HNL 25.970932
HRK 6.694897
HTG 130.545889
HUF 359.724497
IDR 16536.25
ILS 3.547085
IMP 0.752798
INR 85.36665
IQD 1309.569314
IRR 42112.498951
ISK 130.550122
JEP 0.752798
JMD 158.892834
JOD 0.709398
JPY 145.176496
KES 129.194157
KGS 87.449589
KHR 4001.617713
KMF 433.50153
KPW 900.171963
KRW 1400.269808
KWD 0.30672
KYD 0.833015
KZT 515.881587
LAK 21608.024568
LBP 89563.52857
LKR 298.663609
LRD 199.920892
LSL 18.180857
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.478052
MAD 9.247535
MDL 17.132267
MGA 4497.597874
MKD 54.684514
MMK 2099.74514
MNT 3575.293465
MOP 8.008568
MRU 39.824539
MUR 45.71015
MVR 15.410353
MWK 1733.264003
MXN 19.505645
MYR 4.296988
MZN 63.905819
NAD 18.18223
NGN 1609.450143
NIO 36.783857
NOK 10.373205
NPR 136.497651
NZD 1.697159
OMR 0.384983
PAB 0.999604
PEN 3.631806
PGK 4.149057
PHP 55.468991
PKR 281.51302
PLN 3.767134
PYG 7991.751368
QAR 3.647531
RON 4.54804
RSD 104.183425
RUB 83.504054
RWF 1436.888371
SAR 3.750861
SBD 8.350849
SCR 14.186421
SDG 600.496279
SEK 9.705901
SGD 1.29751
SHP 0.785843
SLE 22.729593
SLL 20969.483762
SOS 571.266038
SRD 36.256961
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.746395
SYP 13004.570655
SZL 18.172606
THB 32.9915
TJS 10.345808
TMT 3.51
TND 3.009062
TOP 2.342101
TRY 38.747965
TTD 6.790839
TWD 30.2035
TZS 2697.498241
UAH 41.524787
UGX 3658.552845
UYU 41.785367
UZS 12875.154995
VES 91.098215
VND 25978.5
VUV 120.719299
WST 2.770593
XAF 583.049567
XAG 0.030691
XAU 0.0003
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.718649
XOF 583.054749
XPF 106.005591
YER 244.495888
ZAR 18.20392
ZMK 9001.201599
ZMW 26.314503
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    2.8600

    65.86

    +4.34%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    22.11

    -0.23%

  • SCS

    0.5700

    10.48

    +5.44%

  • NGG

    -2.3900

    70.18

    -3.41%

  • RYCEF

    0.4300

    10.6

    +4.06%

  • AZN

    -2.7700

    67.3

    -4.12%

  • BTI

    -1.1500

    43.3

    -2.66%

  • VOD

    -0.1500

    9.25

    -1.62%

  • RELX

    -0.8100

    54.06

    -1.5%

  • RIO

    -0.8400

    59.18

    -1.42%

  • GSK

    -0.3000

    36.87

    -0.81%

  • CMSD

    -0.0800

    22.33

    -0.36%

  • JRI

    -0.0760

    12.95

    -0.59%

  • BCE

    0.9800

    22.23

    +4.41%

  • BP

    0.4600

    28.59

    +1.61%

  • BCC

    2.4800

    89.58

    +2.77%

Current carbon dioxide levels last seen 14 million years ago
Current carbon dioxide levels last seen 14 million years ago / Photo: © AFP

Current carbon dioxide levels last seen 14 million years ago

The last time carbon dioxide in the atmosphere consistently matched today's human-driven levels was 14 million years ago, according to a large new study Thursday that paints a grim picture of where Earth's climate is headed.

Text size:

Published in the journal Science, the paper covers the period from 66 million years ago until the present, analyzing biological and geochemical signatures from the deep past to reconstruct the historic CO2 record with greater precision than ever before.

"It really brings it home to us that what we are doing is very, very unusual in Earth's history," lead author Baerbel Hoenisch of the Columbia Climate School's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory told AFP.

Among other things, the new analysis finds the last time the air contained 420 parts per million (ppm) of carbon dioxide was between 14-16 million years ago, when there was no ice in Greenland and the ancestors of humans were just transitioning from forests to grasslands.

That is far further back in time than the 3-5 million years that prior analyses have indicated.

Until the late 1700s, atmospheric carbon dioxide was about 280 ppm, meaning humans have already caused an increase of about 50 percent of the greenhouse gas, which traps heat in the atmosphere and has warmed the planet by 1.2 degrees Celsius compared to before industrialization.

"What's important is that Homo, our species, has only evolved 3 million years ago," said Hoenisch.

"And so our civilization is tuned to sea level as it is today, to having warm tropics and cool poles and temperate regions that have a lot of rainfall."

If global CO2 emissions continue to rise we could reach between 600 - 800 ppm by the year 2100.

Those levels were last seen during the Eocene, 30-40 million years ago, before Antarctica was covered in ice and when the world's flora and fauna looked vastly different -- for example huge insects still roamed the Earth.

- Ancient plants -

The new study is the product of seven years of work by a consortium of 80 researchers across 16 countries and is now considered the updated consensus of the scientific community.

The team didn't collect new data -- rather, they synthesized, re-evaluated and validated published work based on updated science and categorized them according to confidence level, then combined the highest-rated into a new timeline.

Many people are familiar with the concept of drilling into ice sheets or glaciers to extract ice cores whose air bubbles reveal past atmospheric composition -- but these only go back so far, generally hundreds of thousands of years.

To look further into the past, paleoclimatologists use "proxies": by studying the chemical composition of ancient leaves, minerals and plankton, they can indirectly derive atmospheric carbon at a given point in time.

The researchers confirmed that the hottest period over the past 66 million years happened 50 million years ago, when CO2 spiked to as much as 1,600 ppm and temperatures were 12C hotter, before a long decline set in.

By 2.5 million years ago, carbon dioxide was 270-280 ppm, ushering in a series of ice ages.

That remained the level when modern humans arrived 400,000 years ago and persisted until our species began burning fossil fuels at large scales.

The team estimates that a doubling of CO2 is predicted to warm the planet by 5-8 degrees Celsius -- but over a long period, hundreds of thousands of years -- when increased temperatures have rippling effects through Earth systems.

For example, melting the polar ice caps would reduce the planet's ability to reflect solar radiation and become a reinforcing feedback loop.

But the new work remains directly relevant to policy makers, stressed Hoenisch.

The carbon record reveals that 56 million years ago, Earth underwent a similar rapid release of carbon dioxide, which caused massive changes to ecosystems and took some 150,000 years to dissipate.

"We are in this for a very long time, unless we sequester carbon dioxide, take it out of the atmosphere, and we stop our emissions sometime soon," she said.

M.Zhou--ThChM