Problem of the length of the current interglacial |
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Authors: | V. A. Dergachev O. M. Raspopov |
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Affiliation: | 1. Federal State Budget Institution of Science—Ioffe Physical—Technical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, St Petersburg, Russia 2. Federal State Budget Institution of Science—Pushkov Institute of Terrestrial Magnetism, Ionosphere, and Radio Wave Propagation, St. Petersburg Branch, St. Petersburg, Russia
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Abstract: | The climate during the past hundreds of thousands of years has been characterized by a rather distinct periodicity of about 100000 yr with brief warming periods (interglacials) lasting approximately 10000–12000 yr. Today, mankind is living in an interglacial period that began about 11 ka ago. In light of the discussion about global warming observed in recent decades, which advocates of an anthropogenic impact associate with emission of greenhouse gases due to combustion of fossil fuel, the question arises concerning the duration of the current interglacial. The data available on climate change and solar radiation on a time scale of the last millions of years are critically analyzed in this article and the problem of the length of the current interglacial is discussed. |
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