-
North Korean leader, daughter try out new tank
-
Israel strikes 'decimated' Iran as war roils markets
-
James ties NBA record for most regular-season games in latest milestone
-
Trump's Mideast muddle could play into Xi's hands at planned summit
-
New BTS album drops ahead of comeback mega-gig
-
Australia must be 'smart' to beat Japan in Asian Cup final: coach
-
Wembanyama lifts playoff-bound Spurs, Doncic and James fuel Lakers
-
Japan ski paradise faces strains of global acclaim
-
Vinicius, Real Madrid must prove consistency in Atletico derby
-
Kane credits Kompany's Bayern 'evolution' as treble beckons
-
PSG look back to their best, but not yet out of sight in Ligue 1
-
New BTS album to drop ahead of comeback mega-gig
-
Troubled Spurs face Forest showdown, Chelsea need top-four surge
-
Australia must be 'smart and adapt' to beat Japan in Asian Cup final: coach
-
From bats to bonds: Uganda's 'cricket grannies'
-
Turkey in cultural diplomacy push to bring history home
-
'The Bachelorette' canned after star's violent video emerges
-
Trump gets approval for gold coin in his likeness
-
Behind the BTS comeback, the dark side of K-pop
-
Crude sinks after Netanyahu tries to reassure on Iran war
-
Three charged with sneaking Nvidia AI chips from US into China
-
Swiatek stunned at Miami Open by 50th-ranked Linette
-
Italy, Germany and France offer help with Hormuz only after ceasefire
-
US-backed airstrikes leave Ecuador border communities in fear
-
'Blackmail': EU leaders round on Orban for stalling Ukraine loan
-
Displacement, bombs and air raid sirens weigh on Mideast Eid celebrations
-
James ties NBA record for most regular-season games played
-
BTS to drop new album ahead of comeback mega-gig
-
Carrick uncertain if Man Utd defender De Ligt will return this season
-
Forest survive shoot-out to reach Europa League quarters, Villa advance
-
US, Israel tactics diverge on Iran as Trump's goals still 'fuzzy'
-
Japan PM placates Trump on Iran, but faces Pearl Harbor surprise
-
Brazil presidential hopeful Flavio Bolsonaro praises Bukele
-
The Iran war and the cost of killing 'bad guys'
-
US stocks cut losses on Netanyahu war comments as energy prices soar again
-
Forest beat Midtjylland on penalties to reach Europa League quarters
-
Netanyahu says Iran decimated as Tehran warns of 'zero restraint' in energy attacks
-
Salvadoran anti-corruption lawyer jailed to 'silence her', husband says
-
California to rename Cesar Chavez Day after sex abuse claims
-
Yazidi woman tells French court of rape, slavery and escape from IS
-
New FIFA ruling boosts prospects for women coaches
-
Megan Jones to captain England in Women's Six Nations
-
Trump says told Netanyahu not to attack Iran gas fields
-
MLS reveals shortened 2027 campaign details
-
FIFA planning for World Cup to 'go ahead as scheduled' amid Iran uncertainty
-
Braves outfielder Profar's full MLB season ban upheld: report
-
Mideast war exposing Europe's reliance on Gulf flights, airlines warn
-
Ghalibaf: Iran's new strongman running war effort
-
UN shipping body urges 'safe maritime corridor' in Gulf
-
Venezuelan student freed after months in US immigration custody
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.
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.
E.Gasser--VB