01891oam 2200445zu 450 991013091060332120210807004651.01-118-66860-X(CKB)3450000000004361(SSID)ssj0000815172(PQKBManifestationID)11457589(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000815172(PQKBWorkID)10806550(PQKB)10150105(NjHacI)993450000000004361(PPN)178594954(EXLCZ)99345000000000436120160829d2001 uy engur|||||||||||txtccrThe Oceans and Rapid Climate Change Past, Present, and Future[Place of publication not identified]American Geophysical Union20011 online resource (332 pages)Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph0-87590-985-X Until a few decades ago, scientists generally believed that significant large-scale past global and regional climate changes occurred at a gradual pace within a time scale of many centuries or millennia. A secondary assumption followed: climate change was scarcely perceptible during a human lifetime. Recent paleoclimatic studies, however, have proven otherwise: that global climate can change extremely rapidly. In fact, there is good evidence that in the past at least regional mean annual temperatures changed by several degrees Celsius on a time scale of several centuries to several decades.Climate changeClimate change.551.6/09/01Seidov Dan961867HauptBernd JMaslin MarkPQKBBOOK9910130910603321The Oceans and Rapid Climate Change2180696UNINA