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Numerous Roman mosaics from North African sites depict fauna now found only in tropical Africa, [6] although it's unclear whether any climate change contributed to that. Throughout the entire Roman Kingdom and the Republic there was the so-called Subatlantic period, in which the Greek and Etruscan city-states also developed. [7]
The Roman Warm Period, or Roman Climatic Optimum, was a period of unusually-warm weather in Europe and the North Atlantic that ran from approximately 250 BC to AD 400. [1] Theophrastus (371 – c. 287 BC) wrote that date trees could grow in Greece if they were planted but that they could not set fruit there.
Climate change: Arthur C. Clarke: 1949: Mother of Storms: Climate change: giant hurricane caused by nuclear explosion: John Barnes: 1994: ISBN 0-312-85560-5: Fairhaven [2] Innovators, engineers, and visionaries struggle against the odds to bring climate solutions to Southeast Asia and to the world. Genevieve Hilton (writing as Jan Lee) and ...
2023 was the hottest year on global record — and that’s not the only reason this year made climate history.. For instance, countries at the Cop28 climate summit struck a historic deal to fight ...
Huang, Pollack & Shen 2008 "A late Quaternary climate reconstruction based on borehole heat flux data, borehole temperature data, and the instrumental record" Kaufman et al. 2009 "Recent warming reverses long-term arctic cooling". Tingley & Huybers 2010a "A Bayesian Algorithm for Reconstructing Climate Anomalies in Space and Time".
Solar is a novel by author Ian McEwan, first published on 18 March 2010 by Jonathan Cape, an imprint of Random House.It is a satire about a jaded Nobel-winning physicist whose dysfunctional personal life and cynical ambition see him pursuing a solar-energy based solution for climate change.
The Climate Book; Climate Capitalism; Climate Change (children's book) Climate Change and Global Energy Security; Climate Change Denial; Climate Code Red; Climate of Hope; The Coming Global Superstorm; Confessions of a Recovering Environmentalist; Cool It: The Skeptical Environmentalist's Guide to Global Warming; Copenhagen Diagnosis
But there is some evidence that the decline of the Roman West is linked to climate change. [24] Slash-and-burn agriculture, associated with lower populations than the Roman period, can be at least as responsible for deforestation and soil erosion as Roman agriculture. Coastal marshes can be caused by sea level changes quite as much as soil erosion.