New Study: Roman And Medieval Warm Periods Were 2.8°C Warmer Than 1970-2000 In Central China

A series of paleoclimate lake reconstructions across China in recent years have failed to support the global-scale warming narrative.

Per a new lake temperature reconstruction (Li et al., 2023) from Central China, there were distinct “warm intervals during the RWP [Roman Warm Period] (403–413 CE), with a temperature 2.89°C higher than that of the mean for 1970–2000 CE, and during the MWP [Medieval Warm Period] (864–882 and 965–994 CE), when the temperature was 2.81°C higher.”

There are 8 other lake sediment reconstructions from the region (Qinghai, Gahai, Sugan, Kusai, Tiancai, Heiahi, Lugu, Cuoqia) documented in the study. None of the 8 are shown to have a modern temperature uptick that would support the claims of an unusually warm modern climate relative to past millennia.

Image Source: Li et al., 2023

3 responses to “New Study: Roman And Medieval Warm Periods Were 2.8°C Warmer Than 1970-2000 In Central China”

  1. mwhite

    “This is the German Health Minister Karl Lauterbach admitting that the COVID vaccine causes serious injury in 1 in 10,000 doses.”

    https://twitter.com/stkirsch/status/1635370825577803776?s=20&utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email

  2. New Study: Roman And Medieval Warm Periods Were 2.8°C Warmer Than 1970-2000 In Central China - Climate- Science.press

    […] From NoTricksZone […]

  3. Rehoboth

    Good job

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