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Archived RebuttalThis is the archived Basic rebuttal to the climate myth "Was Greenland really green in the past?". Click here to view the latest rebuttal. What the science says...
Greenland is a large area situated east of Canada, between the Arctic and Atlantic oceans. About 80% of the island is covered by the Greenland ice sheet. During the 980s, Scandinavian and Icelandic explorers established two or three (according to different accounts) settlements on the south-west coast of Greenland. So what were the conditions in Greenland like 1000 years ago? More precisely, the blog will explore the three following questions:
The Greenland ice sheet is at least 400,000 years oldScientists have estimated that the Greenland ice sheet is between 400,000 and 800,000 years old. This means that the island is unlikely to have been markedly different when Europeans settled there. However, there is evidence that the settled areas were warmer than today, with large birch woodlands providing both timber and fuel. This warmth coincided with the period known as the Medieval Warm Period, which we will discuss below. So how did Greenland get its name? According to the Icelandic sagas, Erik the Red named it in an attempt to lure settlers in search of land and the promise of a better life. However, the age of the ice sheet, which is more than 3 kilometres thick in places, indicates that the opportunities to establish communities would have been limited to small areas. The Medieval Warm Period - a regional, not global, phenomenonDuring the Medieval Warm Period, some areas, most notably in the North Atlantic, were at least as warm as today, if not warmer. However, other areas were colder, and overall the evidence suggests that global temperatures during this period were similar to those at the beginning or middle of the 20th century. This period is explored in more depth here. So not only was Greenland mostly covered by ice when Europeans settled there, the relatively warm conditions during this period were not a global phenomenon. This contrasts with what were are seeing today, where warming is truly global. The different causes behind the warming then and now, which we will look at next, further invalidates any attempt to draw parallels between medieval Greenland and today's conditions. Natural versus man-made climate changeUpdated on 2012-12-17 by Anne-Marie Blackburn. |
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