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10 Human Fingerprints On Climate Change
 
 
 By John Cook
The NOAA State of the Climate 2009  report is an excellent summary of the many lines of evidence that  global warming is happening. Acknowledging the fact that the planet is  warming leads to the all important question - what's causing global  warming? Here is a summary of the empirical evidence that answers this  question. Many different observations find a distinct human fingerprint  on climate change:

To get a closer look, click on the pic above to get a high-res 1024x768 version  (you're all welcome to use this graphic in your Powerpoint  presentations). Or to dig even deeper, here's more info on each  indicator (including links to the original data or peer-reviewed  research):
- Humans are currently emitting around 30 billion tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere every year (CDIAC).  Of course, it could be coincidence that CO2 levels are rising so  sharply at the same time so let's look at more evidence that we're  responsible for the rise in CO2 levels.
- When we measure the type of carbon accumulating in the atmosphere,  we observe more of the type of carbon that comes from fossil fuels (Manning 2006).
- This is corroborated by measurements of oxygen in the atmosphere.  Oxygen levels are falling in line with the amount of carbon dioxide  rising, just as you'd expect from fossil fuel burning which takes oxygen  out of the air to create carbon dioxide (Manning 2006).
- Further independent evidence that humans are raising CO2 levels  comes from measurements of carbon found in coral records going back  several centuries. These find a recent sharp rise in the type of carbon  that comes from fossil fuels (Pelejero 2005).
- So we know humans are raising CO2 levels. What's the effect?  Satellites measure less heat escaping out to space, at the particular  wavelengths that CO2 absorbs heat, thus finding "direct experimental evidence for a significant increase in the Earth's greenhouse effect". (Harries 2001, Griggs 2004, Chen 2007).
- If less heat is escaping to space, where is it going? Back to the  Earth's surface. Surface measurements confirm this, observing more  downward infrared radiation (Philipona 2004, Wang 2009). A closer look at the downward radiation finds more heat returning at CO2 wavelengths, leading to the conclusion that "this  experimental data should effectively end the argument by skeptics that  no experimental evidence exists for the connection between greenhouse  gas increases in the atmosphere and global warming." (Evans 2006).
- If an increased greenhouse effect is causing global warming, we  should see certain patterns in the warming. For example, the planet  should warm faster at night than during the day. This is indeed being  observed (Braganza 2004, Alexander 2006).
- Another distinctive pattern of greenhouse warming is cooling in the  upper atmosphere, otherwise known as the stratosphere. This is exactly  what's happening (Jones 2003).
- With the lower atmosphere (the troposphere) warming and the upper  atmosphere (the stratophere) cooling, another consequence is the  boundary between the troposphere and stratophere, otherwise known as the  tropopause, should rise as a consequence of greenhouse warming. This  has been observed (Santer 2003).
- An even higher layer of the atmosphere, the ionosphere, is expected  to cool and contract in response to greenhouse warming. This has been  observed by satellites (Laštovika 2006).
Science isn't a house of cards, ready to topple if you remove one  line of evidence. Instead, it's like a jigsaw puzzle. As the body of  evidence builds, we get a clearer picture of what's driving our climate.  We now have many lines of evidence all pointing to a single, consistent  answer - the main driver of global warming is rising carbon dioxide  levels from our fossil fuel burning.
 
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