TY - JOUR
T1 - Beyond the hockey stick
T2 - Climate lessons from the Common Era
AU - Mann, Michael E.
N1 - Funding Information:
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. The work by M.E.M. and collaborators described in this article was supported by a series of past and current grants from the NSF Paleoclimate Program spanning the past two decades: Grants 1748097, 1446329, 0902133, and 0542356. I thank both M. Huber and D. Shindell for their thorough and constructive reviews.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/9/28
Y1 - 2021/9/28
N2 - More than two decades ago, my coauthors, Raymond Bradley and Malcolm Hughes, and I published the now iconic "hockey stick" curve. It was a simple graph, derived from large-scale networks of diverse climate proxy ("multiproxy") data such as tree rings, ice cores, corals, and lake sediments, that captured the unprecedented nature of the warming taking place today. It became a focal point in the debate over human-caused climate change and what to do about it. Yet, the apparent simplicity of the hockey stick curve betrays the dynamicism and complexity of the climate history of past centuries and how it can inform our understanding of humancaused climate change and its impacts. In this article, I discuss the lessons we can learn from studying paleoclimate records and climate model simulations of the "Common Era," the period of the past two millennia during which the "signal" of human-caused warming has risen dramatically from the background of natural variability.
AB - More than two decades ago, my coauthors, Raymond Bradley and Malcolm Hughes, and I published the now iconic "hockey stick" curve. It was a simple graph, derived from large-scale networks of diverse climate proxy ("multiproxy") data such as tree rings, ice cores, corals, and lake sediments, that captured the unprecedented nature of the warming taking place today. It became a focal point in the debate over human-caused climate change and what to do about it. Yet, the apparent simplicity of the hockey stick curve betrays the dynamicism and complexity of the climate history of past centuries and how it can inform our understanding of humancaused climate change and its impacts. In this article, I discuss the lessons we can learn from studying paleoclimate records and climate model simulations of the "Common Era," the period of the past two millennia during which the "signal" of human-caused warming has risen dramatically from the background of natural variability.
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U2 - 10.1073/PNAS.2112797118
DO - 10.1073/PNAS.2112797118
M3 - Article
C2 - 34561309
AN - SCOPUS:85117052568
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 118
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 39
M1 - e2112797118
ER -