Wednesday, February 12, 2014

1350+ Peer-Reviewed Papers Supporting Skeptic Arguments Against ACC/AGW Alarmism



"A tour de force list of scientific papers..."
- Robert M. Carter, Ph.D. Environmental Scientist


"Wow, the list is pretty impressive ...It's Oreskes done right."
- Luboš Motl, Ph.D. Theoretical Physicist


"I really appreciate your important effort in compiling the list."
- Willie Soon, Ph.D. Astrophysicist and Geoscientist


"An excellent place to start to take stock of the scientific diversity of positions on AGW."
- Emil A. Røyrvik, Ph.D. Senior Research Scientist


"...it's a very useful resource. Thanks to the pop tech team."
- Joanne Nova, Author of The Skeptics Handbook


"I do confess a degree of fascination with Poptech's list..."
- John Cook, Cartoonist at Skeptical Science


† This resource has been cited over 100 times, including in scholarly peer-reviewed journals.



Before accepting any criticisms of this list, please read the detailed rebuttals.


Table of Contents:

Preface
Disclaimer
Counting Method
Criteria for Inclusion
Criteria for Removal
Formatting
Purpose

Rebuttals to Criticisms

Highlights

General
Antarctica
Arctic
Climate Sensitivity
Clouds
Coral Reefs
Deaths
Disease
Ecological
Glaciers
Greenland
Gulf Stream
Hockey Stick
Medieval Warm Period
Roman Warm Period
Ocean Acidification
Permafrost
Polar Bears
Sea Level
Species Extinctions

Natural Disasters
Droughts, Floods
Earthquakes
Heat Waves
Hurricanes
Storms
Tornadoes
Wildfires

Satellite Temperatures
Urban Heat Island
Weather Stations

1,500-Year Climate Cycle
CO2 Lags Temperature
Cosmic Rays
Lunar
Solar

An Inconvenient Truth
Armed Conflict
Climategate
IPCC
Kyoto Protocol
Socio-Economic
Stern Review

Historic * This section is not counted

Journal Citation List
Journal Notes
Definitions
Impact Factor
Scientist Credentials
Sources
Updates

Acknowledgements
Citations

Tip: Use Ctrl+F (PC) or Command+F (Mac) to search this page.


Preface: The following papers support skeptic arguments against Anthropogenic Climate Change (ACC), Anthropogenic Global Warming (AGW) or Alarmism [e.g. Catastrophic Anthropogenic Global Warming (CAGW) or Dangerous Anthropogenic Global Warming (DAGW)]. Please read the following introductory notes for more detailed information.

Alarmism: (defined), "concern relating to a perceived negative environmental or socio-economic effect of ACC/AGW, usually exaggerated as catastrophic."

Disclaimer: Even though the most prolific authors on the list are skeptics, the inclusion of a paper in this list does not imply a specific personal position to any of the authors. While certain authors on the list cannot be labeled skeptics (e.g. Harold Brooks, Roger Pielke Jr., Roger Pielke Sr.) their paper(s) or results from their paper(s) can still support skeptic's arguments against Alarmism. Some papers are mutually exclusive and should be considered independently. This list will be updated and corrected as necessary.

This is a bibliographic resource for skeptics not a list of skeptics.

Lists of skeptical scientists can be found here:


Counting Method: Only peer-reviewed papers are counted. Supplemental papers are not counted but listed as references in defense of various papers, these are italicized and proceeded by an asterisk ( * ) so they are not confused with the counted papers.

Supplemental papers include (but are not limited to): Addendums, Comments, Corrections, Discussions, Erratum, Rebuttals, Rejoinders, Replies, Responses, Supplemental Material, Updates and Submitted papers.

This is a dynamic list that is routinely updated. When a significant new number of peer-reviewed papers is added the list title will be updated with the new larger number. The list intentionally includes an additional 10+ peer-reviewed papers as a margin of error at all times, which gradually increases between updates. Thus the actual number of peer-reviewed papers on the list can be much greater than stated.

Criteria for Inclusion: All counted papers must be peer-reviewed, published in a scholarly journal and support a skeptic argument against ACC/AGW or Alarmism. This means the papers are either written by a skeptic, explicit to a skeptical position, or were already cited by and determined to be in support of a skeptic argument by highly credentialed scientists, such as Sherwood B. Idso Ph.D. Research Scientist Emeritus, U.S. Water Conservation Laboratory and Patrick J. Michaels Ph.D. Climatology.

Criteria for Removal: Papers will only be removed if it is determined by the editor that they have not properly met the criteria for inclusion or have been retracted by the journal. Just like other popular scientific bibliographic resources (e.g. Scopus, Web of Science), no paper will be removed because of the existence of a criticism or published correction. Any known published correction will be included on the list following the original paper to show that these did not affect the author's original conclusions.

Formatting: All papers are cited as: "Paper Name, Journal Name, Volume, Issue or Number, Pages, Date and Authors". All Supplemental papers are preceded by an asterisk and italicized; Addendums, Comments, Corrections, Erratum, Replies, Responses and Submitted papers. Ordering of the papers is chronological per category.

Purpose: To provide a bibliographic resource for peer-reviewed papers that support skeptic arguments against ACC/AGW or Alarmism and to prove that these papers exist contrary to claims otherwise;

"You realize that there are something like two or three thousand studies all of which concur which have been peer reviewed, and not one of the studies dissenting has been peer reviewed?"

- John Kerry, U.S. Secretary of State and Failed U.S. Presidential Candidate (2004)

"There was a massive study of every scientific article in a peer reviewed article written on global warming in the last ten years. They took a big sample of 10 percent, 928 articles. And you know the number of those that disagreed with the scientific consensus that we’re causing global warming and that is a serious problem out of the 928: Zero. The misconception that there is disagreement about the science has been deliberately created by a relatively small number of people."

- Al Gore, Former U.S. Vice President and Failed U.S. Presidential Candidate (2000)

"I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been told by AGW voices that there are NO qualified skeptics or peer reviewed/published work by them. Including right here by RC regulars. In truth there is serious work and questions raised by significant work by very qualified skeptics which has been peer reviewed and published. It should be at least a bit disturbing for this type of denial to have been perpetrated with such a chorus. It’s one thing to engage and refute. But it’s not right to misrepresent as not even existing the counter viewpoints. I fully recognize the adversarial environment between the two opposing camps which RC and CA/WUWT represent, but the the perpetual declaration that there is no legitimate rejection of AGW is out of line."

- John H., Comment at RealClimate.org



Rebuttals to Criticisms:

I. This first section includes detailed rebuttals to commonly posted links attacking the list:


II. This second section includes general rebuttals to common criticisms:




Criticism: 97% of the climate science literature disagrees with the list.

Rebuttal: No 97% study exists that shows 44,000 peer-reviewed papers explicitly endorsing AGW. The largest study to date, Cook et al. (2013) attempted to categorize 11,944 abstracts [brief summaries] of papers (not entire papers) to their level of endorsement of AGW and found 7930 (66%) held no position on AGW. While only 64 papers (0.5%) explicitly endorsed and quantified AGW as +50% (humans are the primary cause). A later analysis by Legates et al. (2013) found there to be only 41 papers (0.3%) that supported this definition. Cook et al.'s methodology was so fatally flawed that they falsely classified skeptic papers as endorsing the 97% consensus, apparently believing to know more about the papers than their authors. The second part of Cook et al. (2013), the author self-ratings simply confirmed the worthlessness of their methodology, as they were not representative of the sample since only 4% of the authors (1189 of 29,083) rated their own papers and of these 63% disagreed with the abstract ratings. All the other "97% consensus" studies: e.g. Doran & Zimmerman (2009), Anderegg et al. (2010) and Oreskes (2004) have been refuted by peer-review.



Criticism: Every major scientific organization disagrees with the list.

Rebuttal: This is misleading since only a very small minority of scientists have actually expressed a position on AGW from these organizations. Policy statements release by a handful of council members or signed by just the president of a scientific organization can speak for no one other than these few scientists. It is disingenuous to imply that the membership bodies (in some cases hundreds of thousands of members) of these scientific organizations which have never voted to approve such statements can be used in support of them. Many members join scientific organizations for free access to organizational resources or discounts on journals and meetings. They may have little to no interest in the organization's policy positions. Without a comprehensive survey or poll of every member's position in relation to these organization's policy statements no meaningful conclusions can be drawn.



Criticism: The list does not define low climate sensitivity.

Rebuttal: The IPCC states that, "climate sensitivity is likely (66%) to be in the range 2°C to 4.5°C, with a best estimate value of about 3°C." Thus, climate sensitivity estimates where the mean does not exceed 2°C (low end of the IPCC range) or the high end of the range does not exceed 3°C (the IPCC mean) are considered to support skeptical arguments for a low climate sensitivity.



Criticism: The list does not present a scientific argument.

Rebuttal: The list is a bibliographic resource not a scientific argument. The purpose of the list is to show that peer-reviewed papers exist that support skeptic arguments and to be used as a bibliographic resource to locate these papers.



Criticism: The list has been cherry picked.

Rebuttal: This is absolutely false, as the list does not discriminate between competing skeptical viewpoints and the purpose of the list is clearly stated, "To provide a bibliographic resource for peer-reviewed papers that support skeptic arguments against ACC/AGW or Alarmism and to prove that these papers exist contrary to claims otherwise." Using this logic the IPCC reports are "cherry picked" because they failed to included most of these papers.



Criticism: The list has been debunked, discredited or refuted.

Rebuttal: The list has never been debunked, discredited or refuted, as all known criticisms of this list have been rebutted. The existence of a criticism does not make it true, as invalid criticisms of the list have been repeatedly shown to be based on lies, misinformation or strawman arguments. In all cases, these long refuted criticisms are now years old and have no relation to the current revision of the list. Whenever a clarification or correction was made for a legitimate issue these have always been insignificant and they have never affected the list count or changed its purpose.




Rebuttal: Anyone with an elementary knowledge of the Internet knows that links can break at any time for various reasons. Unfortunately certain journals are apparently unable to hire competent web masters who know how to properly migrate URLs when reorganizing their websites - this problem is out of our control. Regardless, the full citation is provided so there is no excuse about not being able to locate a paper using a search engine like Google. All broken links will eventually be fixed by changing them to persistent URLs using the DOI system. Also, all future papers that are added will be done using DOI URLs. When this list was first created the DOI system was incredibly slow and unreliable but since that time performance and reliability has improved to a point that we feel comfortable using them.



Criticism: The list has not been peer-reviewed.

Rebuttal: The list is a bibliographic resource not a scholarly paper, meta-analysis or systematic review. Bibliographic resources are not peer-reviewed but curated by an editor. They are used as aids in locating information, in this case peer-reviewed papers supporting skeptic arguments.



Criticism: The list uses "weasel words".

Rebuttal: Qualifiers are not "weasel words", but an accepted method by the scientific community to express a level of confidence. Rejection of the use of qualifiers would mean rejection of the IPCC reports and the use of such terms as "consensus". The IPCC AR5 WG1 'Summary for Policy Makers' liberally uses qualifiers, "A level of confidence is expressed using five qualifiers: very low, low, medium, high, and very high".



Criticism: The list's title implies the papers were written to support skeptic arguments.

Rebuttal: This is false, as the word "written" is specifically not used in the title. Correct definitions of these words to the actual context they are used here can be found in the "Definitions" section of the list. While hundreds of the papers on the list were written by skeptics, all of the papers are only claimed to have been or can be referenced to support a skeptic argument against Alarmism.



Criticism: All climate related papers not on the list endorse AGW.

Rebuttal: While there are thousands of climate related papers in the scholarly literature only a small percentage of them even mention "Anthropogenic Global Warming" (AGW) let alone explicitly endorse it. Studies such as Cook et al. (2013) have shown that 66% hold no position on AGW while only 0.5% explicitly endorse and quantify AGW as +50% (Humans are the primary cause).



Criticism: None of the papers on the list argue against AGW.

Rebuttal: There are various papers on the list that explicitly argue against AGW, such as: Legates and Davis (1997), Raschke (2001), Singer (2002), Khilyuk and Chilingar (2006), Karlen (2008), Gerlich and Tscheuschner (2009), Kramm and Dlugi (2011), Zhao (2011), Beenstock et al. (2012) and more.



Criticism: None of the papers on the list argue against consensus.

Rebuttal: There are various papers on the list that explicitly argue against consensus, such as: Schulte (2008), Legates et al. (2013) and Tol (2014). While all of the "97% consensus" studies have been refuted by peer-review.



Criticism: Supplemental papers are counted.

Rebuttal: Supplemental papers are not counted but listed as references in defense of various papers, these are italicized and proceeded by an asterisk ( * ) so they are not confused with the counted papers. Supplemental papers include (but are not limited to): Addendums, Comments, Corrections, Discussions, Erratum, Rebuttals, Rejoinders, Replies, Responses, Supplemental Material, Updates and Submitted papers.



Criticism: Some papers on the list are commentary or editorials.

Rebuttal: Every counted paper on the list is a peer-reviewed research or review paper. Certain scholarly journals that do not focus on primary research such as, Trends in Parasitology include research-related 'Opinion' articles that are peer-reviewed. These scholarly works should not be confused with general commentary or editorial pieces that appear in magazines and newspapers.



Criticism: Some papers on the list are duplicates.

Rebuttal: No duplicate papers exist on the list and papers in the Highlights section are not counted twice. In the past there were some very minor issues with the merging of multiple lists and category reorganizations that were quickly corrected and had no affect on the list count. An additional 10+ peer-reviewed papers are included on the list as a margin of error at all times, which gradually increases between updates.



Criticism: Some papers on the list are hidden behind a paywall.

Rebuttal: Whether a full copy of a paper is made freely available is at the discretion of the journal's publisher. Any similar list would have the same limitations since archiving a paper without a publisher's permission would violate copyright law. Where a full copy of a paper was found online, a (PDF) link was added after a paper's name.



Criticism: Some papers on the list are mutually exclusive [contradictory].

Rebuttal: The list is a bibliographic resource not a unified scientific theory and does not discriminate between competing skeptical viewpoints. Papers are included just like they are for other academic bibliographic resources (e.g. Elsevier's Scopus and Ebsco's Academic Search) so long as they meet the topical classification criteria. It is left up to the person using this resource to make up their own minds regarding any mutually exclusive claims. Anyone with an open mind would accept and welcome independent thought and debate on an unsettled scientific discipline like climate change.



Criticism: Some papers on the list are not relevant.

Rebuttal: Invalid criticisms of the list include lies, misinformation and strawman arguments that misrepresent why some papers were listed. All of the papers on the list can support a skeptic argument against ACC/AGW or Alarmism - which includes hundreds of ridiculous claims made by Alarmists.



Criticism: Some papers on the list are not peer-reviewed.

Rebuttal: Every counted paper on the list has been peer-viewed and each journal is checked that it follows a scholarly peer-review process. Critics have always been asked to provide evidence to support their allegations, yet repeatedly fail to do so. If a paper is shown to be listed in error it will be removed. The list also includes supplemental papers, which are not counted but listed as references in defense of various papers. These are proceeded by an asterisk ( * ) and italicized so they cannot be confused with the actual list of counted papers. There is no requirement for supplemental papers to be peer-reviewed, even though almost all of them have been.



Criticism: Some papers on the list are not peer-reviewed because they are a "Letter".

Rebuttal: "Letters" is a term used to describe a type of peer-reviewed scientific document format in certain scholarly journals such as Nature. These original research articles should not be confused with "Letters to the Editor".



Criticism: Some papers on the list are not physical science papers.

Rebuttal: This is a strawman argument, as it is not claimed that all the papers are physical science papers, only that they are all peer-reviewed. Just like the WGII and WGIII sections of the IPCC reports, peer-reviewed papers from social scientists and policy analysts are included in the list. These papers appear in the appropriate socio-economic sections (e.g. Socio-Economic) separate from the physical science sections on the list. Regardless, there are over 1000 physical science papers on the list.



Criticism: Some papers on the list are not research papers.

Rebuttal: This is a strawman argument, as it is not claimed that all the papers are "research" papers, only that they are all peer-reviewed. Review papers under go the same peer-review process as research papers and are considered scientifically valid. Regardless, there are numerous original research papers on the list.



Criticism: Some papers on the list are not widely cited.

Rebuttal: Citations are a determination of popularity not scientific validity. The infamous retracted paper falsely linking vaccines to autism, Wakefield et al. (1998) has been cited over 2500 times. While this list does not discriminate against papers based on unscientific popularity metrics, many papers on the list have still been cited hundreds of times; e.g. "Variation of cosmic ray flux and global cloud coverage—a missing link in solar-climate relationships" has been cited over 1200 times, "Some coolness concerning global warming" over 550 times and "Plant responses to atmospheric CO2 enrichment in the face of environmental constraints: a review of the past 10 years' research" over 500 times.



Criticism: Some papers on the list are old.

Rebuttal: The age of any scientific paper is irrelevant. Using this argument would mean dismissing Svante Arrhenius's 1896 paper "On the influence of carbonic acid in the air upon the temperature of the ground" and the basis for greenhouse theory. Regardless, there are over 1000 papers published since 2000 and over 1250 papers published since 1990 on the list. The handful of papers in the Historic section (pre-1970) are not counted but included to demonstrate that skepticism has been around for a long time.



Criticism: Some papers on the list are outdated.

Rebuttal: Scientific papers do not become "outdated", they can only be falsified and even then they can still remain useful for future research to build upon or adapt from. Scientists have called for various scientific theories to be declared "outdated", from the Big Bang to Evolution but without providing objectively valid arguments that actually falsify them. This is a form of scientific censorship based on ideological biases and personal prejudices with the intent to persuade people from reading certain papers, when in reality the papers may very well be correct.



Criticism: Some papers on the list are refuted by a blog post.

Rebuttal: That is not how peer-reviewed papers are challenged. Any valid criticisms would follow the established peer-review process of submitting a comment for publication in the same journal, which allows the author of the original paper a chance to publish a rebuttal in defense of their paper. The list includes any rebuttals to published critical comments following the original paper, these are italicized and proceeded by an asterisk ( * ) so they are not confused with the counted papers.



Criticism: Some papers on the list contain errors.

Rebuttal: The list includes a small number of valid papers which also contained minor errors that have since been corrected and did not affect the original paper's conclusions. The scholarly peer-review process is not infallible and errors are sometimes not caught until after the post-publication peer-review process when a larger volume of scientists have had a chance to read a paper. Science is a self-correcting process and publishing corrections to papers is the standard method to do this in the scholarly literature. Corrected papers are never removed from scientific bibliographic resources like retracted papers and they will continue to be cited. The only difference going forward is they should be cited alongside the published correction. This list contains any supplemental papers that include corrections or erratum which are listed following the original. Supplemental papers are preceded by an asterisk and italicized so they cannot be confused with the original paper. In some cases, such as Lindzen and Choi (2009) the authors were unable to get a correction published in the original journal and instead had to publish their correction elsewhere - Lindzen and Choi (2011). As expected, the original paper - Lindzen and Choi (2009) continues to be extensively cited over 125 times.



Criticism: Some papers on the list discredit the entire list.

Rebuttal: Cherry picking papers from the list and misrepresenting why they were included is disingenuous. Most people attempting this make invalid assumptions for why a paper was included and then come to a false conclusion about the entire list. In all cases these cherry picked papers have been shown to support a skeptic argument against Alarmism when challenged. A "Highlights" section is specifically included to provide a more accurate sample using papers that make clear skeptic arguments that cannot be misinterpreted.



Criticism: Some papers on the list do not argue against AGW.

Rebuttal: This is a strawman argument, as the list not only includes papers that support skeptic arguments against ACC/AGW but also Alarmism. Thus, a paper does not have to argue against AGW to still support skeptic arguments against alarmist conclusions (e.g. Hurricanes are getting worse due to global warming). Valid skeptic arguments include that AGW is exaggerated or inconsequential, such as those made by Richard S. Lindzen Ph.D. Professor Emeritus of Atmospheric Science at MIT and John R. Christy Ph.D. Professor of Atmospheric Science at UAH.



Criticism: Some papers on the list do not argue against climate change denial.

Rebuttal: This is a strawman argument, as no paper on the list argues that the climate does not change.



Criticism: Some papers on the list do not argue against global warming.

Rebuttal: This is a strawman argument, as no paper on the list argues that there has not been a global temperature increase of a fraction of a degree since the end of the little ice age.



Criticism: Some papers on the list have been debunked, discredited or refuted.

Rebuttal: The existence of a criticism does not make it true. Rebuttals to published peer-reviewed criticisms of a paper are included on the list as supplemental papers following the original. These rebuttals either completely refute the original criticism or correct for legitimate errors and show that these do not affect their original conclusions. It is not reasonable to expect these authors to waste their time responding to every alarmist blog post or comment made against their paper(s) on the Internet. Yet, according to AGW proponents peer-reviewed papers that do not agree with their alarmist position on climate change are either wrong or do not exist. This bibliographic resource was created to correct this myth.



Criticism: Some papers on the list have been retracted.

Rebuttal: Not a single peer-reviewed paper that has ever appeared on this list has had its peer-reviewed status retracted. If any of these papers are retracted by the journal they were published in they will be removed from this list. This is explicitly stated in the Criteria for Removal.



Criticism: Some papers were listed based only on their title.

Rebuttal: Hundreds of papers on the list have been read in full, while every paper's abstract and conclusion (when available) was read before it was listed. In cases where a paper was not written by a skeptic or support of a skeptic argument was not explicit in the abstract or conclusion, an independent summary by highly credentialed scientists, such as Sherwood B. Idso Ph.D. Research Scientist Emeritus, U.S. Water Conservation Laboratory and Patrick J. Michaels Ph.D. Climatology was used or the paper was read in full.



Criticism: Most of the papers on the list come from Energy & Environment.

Rebuttal: The IPCC cited scholarly peer-reviewed journal Energy & Environment only represents 10% of the list. There are still over 1200 papers from 350 other journals on the list, including over 120 papers from Geophysical Research Letters.



Criticism: Papers on the list come from "dog astrology" journals.

Rebuttal: This is a dishonest ad hominem that attempts to misrepresent the entire list by cherry picking the peer-reviewed Journal of Scientific Exploration (JSE) and the two listed papers from it, which represent a negligible 0.1%. This list does not discriminate against scholarly journals based on dishonest ad hominem attacks. The JSE is a general interest journal that attempts to "provide a professional forum for critical discussion of topics that are for various reasons ignored or studied inadequately within mainstream science." This can include papers debating the scientific validity of controversial subjects like astrology (Fuzeau-Braesch and Denis 2007) but defining a journal based on cherry picking a single paper from it is disingenuous since by using this same "criteria" the JSE can just as easily be defined as a "debunking astrology journal" (McGrew and McFall 1990). Regardless, neither of these two papers on the list discuss astrology or any other controversial topic outside of climate change. While they (e.g. Deming 2005) have been cited in other scholarly journals referenced by the IPCC, such as Geophysical Research Letters (Huang et al. 2008), Public Understanding of Science (Jaspal and Nerlich 2014) and Science Communication (Jaspal et al. 2013).



Criticism: Some journals on the list are not indexed in a Thomson Reuters product.

Rebuttal: ESI (Essential Science Indicators), JCR (Journal Citation Reports), SCI (Science Citation Index) and WoS (Web of Science) are for-profit, commercial products of the multi-billion dollar Thomson Reuters corporation that indexes only 12,000 peer-reviewed journals (covering the sciences, social sciences, arts and humanities) using a subjective inclusion process. Whether a journal is indexed by them is irrelevant to the peer-review status of the journal or the scientific validity of a paper. There are thousands of completely legitimate peer-reviewed journals that are not included by them but are with competitors. For instance, Elsevier's Scopus indexes over 21,000 peer-reviewed journals.



Criticism: Some journals on the list are not peer-reviewed.

Rebuttal: No paper is listed without first confirming the journal is peer-reviewed. With all journals that are challenged as to their peer-review status, further confirmation is done using bibliographic databases from EBSCO, Scopus and Thomson Reuters. This detailed information is provided in the Journal Notes following the list.



Criticism: Some journals on the list are trade journals.

Rebuttal: Trade journals are defined by Scopus as, "serial publications covering and intended to reach a specific industry, trade or type of business. These publications are usually a magazine type of periodical with articles on topical subjects, news items and advertisements that appeal to those in the field. Trade journals are seldom refereed and do not always have an editorial board. Abstracts are usually short or nonexistent and few or no references are given." There are no journals on the list that match this criteria or are indexed in a scientific bibliographic database as a trade journal.



Criticism: Some journals on the list do not use relevant reviewers.

Rebuttal: The criteria for reviewers is similar for all scholarly peer-reviewed journals. A journal's editor with assistance from the editorial board selects and recruits credentialed experts relevant to the subject matter of the paper being reviewed. It is common for reviewers to be academics at universities who volunteer their time for the advancement of science and in return receive a credential that is highly respected by the scientific community. Being independent volunteers, reviewers are not part of a journal's staff and can review for any journal.



Criticism: Some journals on the list have a low impact factor.

Rebuttal: Impact Factor is a subjectively devised determination of popularity not scientific validity, that is widely abused and manipulated. This list does not discriminate against journals based on unscientific popularity metrics.



Criticism: Authors have demanded that their papers be removed from the list.

Rebuttal: In over seven years, only one "co-author" (Russell Dickerson) has ever contacted the editor with any such demands and he was using strawman arguments ("Please remove this article from your list of skeptics.") about why his paper ["Climate Change: The Need to Consider Human Forcings Besides Greenhouse Gases"] was included, despite it clearly stating in the disclaimer - "This is a bibliographic resource for skeptics not a list of skeptics." It was not worth investing the time to defend the real reason for its inclusion, that it supports the skeptic argument for CO2 not being the sole dominant human forcing as the IPCC has argued so the paper was removed. The lead author of this paper, Roger Pielke Sr. never made any such demands and stated in an email to the editor that their paper argues against the IPCC. Roger Pielke Jr. has never contacted the editor requesting any papers be removed and various papers he authored, mainly relating to incorrect attribution of natural disasters are included on the list.



Criticism: Few of the papers on the list were authored by skeptics.

Rebuttal: While this is not a list of scientists, hundreds of papers on the list were authored by skeptics. The most prolific authors on the list are all highly credentialed skeptical scientists, such as; Sherwood B. Idso, Richard S. Lindzen, Patrick J. Michaels, John R. Christy, Roy W. Spencer, S. Fred Singer, Robert C. Balling Jr., Willie H. Soon, Ross McKitrick, Stephen McIntyre, Sallie L. Baliunas, Indur M. Goklany, David H. Douglas, Nils-Axel Morner, Paul C. Knappenberger, David R. Legates, Robert M. Carter, Chris de Freitas, Craig Loehle, Craig D. Idso, Olavi Karner, Syun-Ichi Akasofu, Nicola Scafetta, Nir J. Shaviv, Henrik Svensmark and many more including; Alan Carlin, Arthur B. Robinson, Arthur Rorsch, Don J. Easterbrook, François Gervais, Frederick Seitz, Garth W. Paltridge, Lee C. Gerhard, Timothy F. Ball, Vincent R. Gray, William M. Briggs and Freeman J. Dyson.



Criticism: Most of the papers on the list come from a small amount of authors.

Rebuttal: Cherry picking the most prolific authors as representative of the entire list is misleading. ISI Highly Cited Researchers such as Sherwood B. Idso and Richard S. Lindzen will naturally be well represented on the list. While it had been independently verified by Needlebase that there were already over 1500 unique authors on the list in 2011 when it was only at 900+ papers.



Criticism: Some authors on the list are funded by energy companies.

Rebuttal: Intellectually dishonest individuals who are incapable of accepting the existence of scholarly papers contrary to their alarmist ideology have chosen to smear the highly credentialed scientists who authored these papers with libelous ad hominem attacks - falsely implying they are corrupt. No remote evidence has ever been presented that shows a skeptical scientist has changed their position on an issue due to a funding source. While honest investigations have shown these attacks to be baseless: Are Skeptical Scientists funded by ExxonMobil? The problem with the corruption argument is that it implies that scientists and researchers who rely primarily on public funding for their climate work are not motivated to tailor their research to the beliefs and policy views of their funding sources. Yet, policy analyses have shown that public funding of science may be susceptible to producing biased results. Regardless, to claim a largely uncoordinated grassroots movement of skeptical scientists are winning the debate against a highly organized climate monopoly that has received over $79 billion in funding because they were granted a paltry $2 million a year from companies like Exxon-Mobil is beyond laughable.



Criticism: Some authors on the list are not climate scientists.

Rebuttal: There is no objective criteria that can be used to determine who is a "climate scientist". The field of climate science is a very broad discipline that includes scientists from a variety of backgrounds. Very few climate scientists have a Ph.D. in Climatology like skeptical scientist Dr. Patrick J. Michaels. Well known alarmist scientists such as NASA's Gavin Schmidt of RealClimate.org has a Ph.D. in Mathematics, Phil Jones the Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) of Climategate fame has a Ph.D. in Hydrology, IPCC Chairman Rajendra Pachauri has a Ph.D. in Industrial Engineering and Hockey Stick author Michael Mann has a Ph.D. in Geology.



Criticism: Some authors on the list are not scientists.

Rebuttal: Just like the WGII and WGIII sections of the IPCC reports, peer-reviewed papers from social scientists and policy analysts are included in the list. These papers appear in the appropriate socio-economic sections (e.g. Socio-Economic) separate from the physical science sections on the list. The most prolific authors on the list are physical scientists such as ISI Highly Cited Researchers Sherwood B. Idso Ph.D. Research Scientist Emeritus, U.S. Water Conservation Laboratory and Richard S. Lindzen Ph.D. Professor Emeritus of Atmospheric Science at MIT.



Criticism: Some authors on the list are not skeptics.

Rebuttal: It is explicitly stated in the disclaimer that, "The inclusion of a paper in this list does not imply a specific personal position to any of the authors. While certain authors on the list cannot be labeled skeptics (e.g. Harold Brooks, Roger Pielke Jr., Roger Pielke Sr.) their paper(s) or results from their paper(s) can still support skeptic's arguments against Alarmism. This is a bibliographic resource for skeptics not a list of skeptics."



Criticism: AGW hypothesis is never used by scientists.

Rebuttal: The phrase "AGW (Anthropogenic Global Warming) hypothesis" is used by scientists and can be found in the scholarly literature (e.g. Stern and Kaufmann 2000, Hertzberg 2009, Paterson 2011, Contescu 2012, Triacca et al. 2013 and Martin 2015).



Criticism: Alarmism is never used by scientists.

Rebuttal: The term "Alarmism" is used by scientists and can be found in the scholarly literature (e.g. Bradley Jr. 2000, Leiserowitz 2006, Risbey 2008, Salehyan 2008, Galam 2010, Paterson 2011, Lindzen 2012 and Legates et al. 2013).



Criticism: CAGW is never used by scientists.

Rebuttal: The term "CAGW (Catastrophic Anthropogenic Global Warming)" is used by scientists and can be found in the scholarly literature (e.g. Carlin 2011, Lindzen 2012, Van Kooten 2012, Nemeth 2014, Rose 2014 and Parker 2016) and is explicitly implied in the IPCC reports.



Criticism: DAGW is never used by scientists.

Rebuttal: The term "DAGW (Dangerous Anthropogenic Global Warming)" is used by scientists and can be found in the scholarly literature (e.g. Boehmer-Christiansen 2002, Kondratyev 2004, Hansen et al. 2005, Jankovic 2008, Schellnhuber 2010, Singer 2010 and Lee 2015).



Criticism: The editor is not qualified to compile the list.

Rebuttal: The editor's university education and later work with research scientists on scholarly peer-reviewed papers for topics such as environmental recycling, nuclear waste disposal and anthropogenic global warming is all the qualifications that are needed to compile a bibliographic resource like this. No specific climate science qualifications are needed since the papers are either written by a qualified skeptic (e.g. Dr. Richard S. Lindzen, Dr. John R. Christy), explicit to a skeptical position (e.g. "CO2-induced global warming: a skeptic's view of potential climate change"), or were already cited by and determined to be in support of a skeptic argument by highly credentialed scientists, such as Dr. Sherwood B. Idso Ph.D. Research Scientist Emeritus, U.S. Water Conservation Laboratory at CO2 Science and Dr. Patrick J. Michaels Ph.D. Climatology at World Climate Report - not the editor. The editor has been acknowledged in the scholarly literature as usefully contributing to published papers on anthropogenic global warming.



Criticism: Popular Technology.net was named to be misleading.

Rebuttal: This is complete nonsense, using this argument would mean magazines like Popular Photography (est. 1937 by Ziff-Davis publishing) were named to be misleading which is obviously ridiculous. The website was named out of the editor's love of technology and as an homage to some of his long-time favorite magazines - Popular Science and Popular Mechanics.



Criticism: Popular Technology.net is a conspiracy theorist website.

Rebuttal: This is a dishonest ad hominem, as we have resources challenging 911, JFK and Moon Landing conspiracy theories.



Criticism: Popular Technology.net is a creationist website.

Rebuttal: This is a dishonest ad hominem, as the editors all support evolution theory but unlike extremists we respect individual's religious views and their right to hold them.



Criticism: Popular Technology.net is a right-wing website.

Rebuttal: This is a dishonest ad hominem, as the editors are politically independent.



Criticism: Popular Technology.net is a "denier" website.

Rebuttal: This is a reprehensible smear, as we believe the Holocaust happened and nothing like it should ever happen again.



Criticism: Popular Technology.net is a climate "denier" website.

Rebuttal: This is a dishonest ad hominem, as we believe there is such a thing as a climate.



Criticism: Popular Technology.net is a climate change "denier" website.

Rebuttal: This is a dishonest ad hominem, as we believe the climate changes.



Criticism: Popular Technology.net is a global warming "denier" website.

Rebuttal: This is a dishonest ad hominem, as we believe there has been a global temperature increase of a fraction of a degree since the end of the little ice age.



Criticism: Popular Technology.net is a science "denier" website.

Rebuttal: This is a dishonest ad hominem, as we believe in the study and knowledge of the physical world and its behavior that is based on experiments and facts that can be proved known as science.



Criticism: Popular Technology.net is an AGW "denier" website.

Rebuttal: This is a dishonest ad hominem, as we believe there is a scientific hypothesis called anthropogenic global warming (AGW).



Criticism: Popular Technology.net is not a scholarly journal.

Rebuttal: Bibliographic resources that index academic work are not published in scholarly journals but rather by privately held companies. The most well known are published by multi-billion dollar for-profit corporations (e.g. Elsevier, Thomson Reuters). Popular Technology.net however is a not-for-profit organization and thus not biased towards financial gain.



Criticism: Popular Technology.net is not cited, referenced or taken seriously.

Rebuttal: Popular Technology.net is a highly cited website referenced by over 300 independent sources throughout more than 25 countries in books and scholarly peer-reviewed journals, by major and regional news media, public policy organizations and think tanks, political institutions, on radio and by the technology community.



Highlights: (A sample selection of papers from the list)

Climate Science: Is it currently designed to answer questions? (PDF) - Archive
(Euresis Journal, Volume 2, pp. 161-192, March 2012)
- Richard S. Lindzen


Can increasing carbon dioxide cause climate change? (PDF)
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 94, Number 16, pp. 8335-8342, August 1997)
- Richard S. Lindzen


CO2-induced global warming: a skeptic's view of potential climate change (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 10, Number 1, pp. 69-82, April 1998)
- Sherwood B. Idso


Celestial driver of Phanerozoic climate? (PDF)
(GSA Today, Volume 13, Issue 7, pp. 4-10, July 2003)
- Nir J. Shaviv, Jan Veizer


The M&M Critique of the MBH98 Northern Hemisphere Climate Index: Update and Implications (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 1, pp. 69-100, January 2005)
- Stephen McIntyre, Ross McKitrick


Cosmoclimatology: a new theory emerges (PDF)
(Astronomy & Geophysics, Volume 48, Issue 1, pp. 1.18-1.24, February 2007)
- Henrik Svensmark


Implications of the Secondary Role of Carbon Dioxide and Methane Forcing in Climate Change: Past, Present, and Future (PDF)
(Physical Geography, Volume 28, Number 2, pp. 97-125, March 2007)
- Willie H. Soon


A comparison of tropical temperature trends with model predictions (PDF)
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 28, Issue 13, pp. 1693-1701, December 2007)
- David H. Douglass, John R. Christy, Benjamin D. Pearson, S. Fred Singer


Recent Changes in the Climate: Natural or Forced by Human Activity - (PDF)
(Ambio, Volume 37, Number sp14, pp. 483–488, November 2008)
- Wibjorn Karlen


Empirical evidence for a celestial origin of the climate oscillations and its implications (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 72, Issue 13, pp. 951-970, August 2010)
- Nicola Scafetta


What Do Observational Datasets Say about Modeled Tropospheric Temperature Trends since 1979? (PDF)
(Remote Sensing, Volume 2, Issue 9, pp. 2148-2169, September 2010)
- John R. Christy, Benjamin Herman, Roger Pielke Sr., Philip Klotzbach, Richard T. McNider, Justin J. Hnilo, Roy W. Spencer, Thomas Chase, David Douglass


On the recovery from the Little Ice Age (PDF)
(Natural Science, Volume 2, Number 7, pp. 1211-1224, November 2010)
- Syun-Ichi Akasofu


A statistical analysis of multiple temperature proxies: Are reconstructions of surface temperatures over the last 1000 years reliable? (PDF)
(Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 5, Number 1, pp. 5-44, March 2011)
- Blakeley B. McShane, Abraham J. Wyner


Lack of Consistency Between Modeled and Observed Temperature Trends (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 22, Number 4, pp. 375-406, June 2011)
- S. Fred Singer


On the Observational Determination of Climate Sensitivity and Its Implications (PDF)
(Asia-Pacific Journal of Atmospheric Sciences, Volume 47, Number 4, pp. 377-390, August 2011)
- Richard S. Lindzen, Yong-Sang Choi


Modern Environmentalism: A Longer Term Threat to Western Civilization
(Energy & Environment, Volume 24, Number 6, pp. 1063-1072, October 2013)
- Alan Carlin


Tiny warming of residual anthropogenic CO2
(International Journal of Modern Physics B, Volume 28, Issue 13, pp. 1-20, May 2014)
- François Gervais


Quantifying the consensus on anthropogenic global warming in the literature: A re-analysis (PDF)
(Energy Policy, Volume 73, pp. 701-705, October 2014)
- Richard S. J. Tol


Why models run hot: results from an irreducibly simple climate model
(Science Bulletin, Volume 60, Issue 1, pp. 122-135, January 2015)
- Christopher Monckton, Willie H. Soon, David R. Legates, William M. Briggs


* Keeping it simple: the value of an irreducibly simple climate model
(Science Bulletin, Volume 60, Issue 15, pp. 1378–1390, August 2015)
- Christopher Monckton, Willie H. Soon, David R. Legates, William M. Briggs


Anthropogenic CO2 warming challenged by 60-year cycle (PDF)
(Earth-Science Reviews, Volume 155, pp. 129–135, April 2016)
- François Gervais




General:

The Climatological Significance of a Doubling of Earth's Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Concentration
(Science, Volume 207, Issue 4438, pp. 1462-1463, March 1980)
- Sherwood B. Idso


A surface air temperature response function for earth's atmosphere
(Boundary-Layer Meteorology, Volume 22, Number 2, pp. 227-232, February 1982)
- Sherwoord B. Idso


The Role of Convective Model Choice in Calculating the Climate Impact of Doubling CO2 (PDF)
(Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, Volume 39, Issue 6, pp. 1189–1205, June 1982)
- Richard S. Lindzen, A. Y. Hou, B. F. Farrell


Long-term stabilization of earth's surface air temperature by a negative feedback mechanism
(Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 31, Number 3, pp. 211-219, August 1982)
- Sherwood B. Idso


CO2 and climate: Where is the water vapor feedback?
(Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 31, Number 4, pp. 325-329, October 1982)
- Sherwood B. Idso


Temperature limitation by evaporation in hot climates and the greenhouse effects of water vapor and carbon dioxide
(Agricultural Meteorology, Volume 27, Issues 1-2, pp. 105-109, November 1982)
- Sherwood B. Idso


Carbon Dioxide and Global Temperature: What the Data Show
(Journal of Environmental Quality, Volume 12, Number 2, pp. 159-163, 1983)
- Sherwood B. Idso


On the magnitude of the CO2 greenhouse effect
(Applied Energy, Volume 14, Issue 3, pp. 227-232, 1983)
- Sherwood B. Idso


Do increases in atmospheric CO2 have a cooling effect on surface air temperature? (PDF)
(Climatological Bulletin, Volume 17, Number 2, pp. 22-26, October 1983)
- Sherwood B. Idso


* The Impetus for CO2-Induced Climatic Change: A Reply to Comments of Dr. Kevin Hamilton (PDF)
(Climatological Bulletin, Volume 18, Number 1, pp. 37-39, April 1984)
- Sherwood B. Idso


Shortcomings of CO2-climate models raise questions about the wisdom of energy policy implications
(Applied Energy, Volume 16, Issue 1, pp. 53-57, 1984)
- Sherwood B. Idso


The climatic effect of co2: A different view
(Atmospheric Environment, Volume 18, Issue 2, pp. 431-434, 1984)
- Hugh W. Ellsaesser


An empirical evaluation of earth’s surface air temperature response to radiative forcing, including feedback, as applied to the CO2-climate problem
(Meteorology and Atmospheric Physics, Volume 34, Issue 1-2, pp. 1-19, March 1984)
- Sherwood B. Idso


Case for Carbon Dioxide
(Journal of Environmental Sciences, Volume 27, Number 3, pp. 19-22, May/June 1984)
- Sherwood B. Idso


What if increases in atmospheric CO2 have an inverse greenhouse effect? I. Energy balance considerations related to surface albedo
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 4, Issue 4, pp. 399-409, July 1984)
- Sherwood B. Idso


Carbon Dioxide and Climate: Is There a Greenhouse in Our Future?
(The Quarterly Review of Biology, Volume 59, Number 3, pp. 291-294, September 1984)
- Sherwood B. Idso


The CO2 Climate Controversy: An Issue of Global Concern
(New Zealand Geographer, Volume 40, Issue 2, pp. 110-112, October 1984)
- Sherwood B. Idso


The Search for Global CO2 etc. 'Greenhouse Effects'
(Environmental Conservation, Volume 12, Number 1, pp. 29-35, March 1985)
- Sherwood B. Idso


An upper limit to global surface air temperature
(Meteorology and Atmospheric Physics, Volume 34, Number 2, pp. 141-144, June 1985)
- Sherwood B. Idso


The value of climate forecasting
(Surveys in Geophysics, Volume 7, Number 3, pp. 273-290, June 1985)
- Garth W. Paltridge


Global climatic trends as revealed by the recorded data
(Reviews of Geophysics, Volume 24, Number 4, pp. 745-794, November 1986)
- Hugh W. Ellsaesser, Michael C. MacCracken, John J. Walton, Stanley L. Grotch


The CO2/trace gas greenhouse effect: theory versus reality
(Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 38, Number 1, pp. 55-56, March 1987)
- Sherwood B. Idso


Carbon dioxide and climate in the Vostok ice core
(Atmospheric Environment, Volume 22, Issue 10, pp. 2341-2342, 1988)
- Sherwood B. Idso


Greenhouse warming or Little Ice Age demise: A critical problem for climatology
(Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 39, Number 1, pp. 54-56, March 1988)
- Sherwood B. Idso


Anthropogenic Warming in North Alaska?
(Journal of Climate, Volume 1, Issue 9, pp. 942–945, September 1988)
- Patrick J. Michaels, David E. Sappington, David E. Stooksbury


The CO2 greenhouse effect on Mars, Earth, and Venus
(Science of the Total Environment, Volume 77, Issue 2-3, pp. 291-294, December 1988)
- Sherwood B. Idso


The search for CO2/trace gas greenhouse warming
(Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 40, Issue 1-2, pp. 101-102, March 1989)
- Sherwood B. Idso, John F. B. Mitchell


A tale of ten fallacies: The skeptical enquirer's view of the carbon dioxide/climate controversy
(Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, Volume 47, Issues 2–4, pp. 349-371, September 1989)
- William E. Reifsnyder


An upper limit to the greenhouse effect of Earth's atmosphere
(Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 40, Number 3, pp. 171-174, September 1989)
- Sherwood B. Idso


On the stability of Earth's climate
(Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 39, Number 3, pp. 177-178, September 1989)
- Sherwood B. Idso


Use of time series analysis to detect climatic change
(Journal of Hydrology, Volume 111, Issues 1-4, pp. 259-279, November 1989)
- Geoff Kite


Upper ocean temperature variability in the northeast Pacific Ocean: Is it an indicator of global warming?
(Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, Volume 94, Issue C12, pp. 18175-18183, December 1989)
- Thomas C. Royer


A different view of the climatic effect of CO2 - Updated
(Atmosfera, Volume 3, Number 1, pp. 3-29, 1990)
- Hugh W. Ellsaesser


Atmospheric greenhouse effect in the earth's history
(Doklady Earth Sciences, Volume 315, Number 6, pp. 40-45, 1990)
- O. G. Sorokhtin


Is recent climate change across the United States related to rising levels of anthropogenic greenhouse gases?
(Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, Volume 95, Issue D10, pp. 16617–16637, January 1990)
- Marc S. Plantico, Thomas R. Karl, George Kukla, Joyce Gavin


Some Coolness Concerning Global Warming (PDF)
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 71, Issue 3, pp. 288–299, March 1990)
- Richard S. Lindzen


The greenhouse effect and global change: review and reappraisal
(International Journal of Environmental Studies, Volume 36, Issue 1-2, pp. 55-71, July 1990)
- Patrick J. Michaels

New assessments of global climate change
(Atmosfera, Volume 4, Number 3, pp. 177-188, 1991)
- Kirill Ya. Kondratyev


What do climate models tell us about global warming?
(Pure and Applied Geophysics, Volume 135, Number 1, pp. 125-133, January 1991)
- Christopher Essex


Surface air temperature response to increasing global industrial productivity: A beneficial greenhouse effect?
(Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 44, Number 1, pp. 37-41, March 1991)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Robert C. Balling Jr.


Carbon dioxide and the fate of Earth
(Global Environmental Change, Volume 1, Number 3, pp. 178-182, June 1991)
- Sherwood B. Idso


Global Warming as a Manifestation of a Random Walk
(Journal of Climate, Volume 4, Issue 6, pp. 589-597, June 1991)
- A. H. Gordon


Overlooked scientific issues in assessing hypothesized greenhouse gas warming (PDF)
(Environmental Software, Volume 6, Number 2, pp. 100-107, June 1991)
- Roger A. Pielke Sr.


Evaluating the climatic effect of doubling atmospheric CO2 via an analysis of Earth's historical temperature record
(Science of The Total Environment, Volume 106, Issue 3, pp. 239-242, July 1991)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Robert C. Balling Jr.


The Aerial Fertilization Effect of CO2 and Its Implications for Global Carbon Cycling and Maximum Greenhouse Warming
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 72, Issue 7, pp. 962-965, July 1991)
- Sherwood B. Idso


Global warming: What does the science tell us?
(Energy, Volume 16, Issues 11-12, pp. 1331-1345, November-December 1991)
- Robert Jastrow, William Nierenberg, Frederick Seitz


Ancient atmospheric C02 pressures inferred from natural goethites
(Nature, Volume 355, Number 6385, pp. 342-344, January 1992)
- J. Crayton Yapp, Harald Poths


US temperature/precipitation relationships: implications for future 'greenhouse' climates
(Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, Volume 58, Issues 1–2, pp. 143–147, March 1992)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Robert C. Balling Jr.


Atmospheric CO2 and global warming: a critical review (PDF)
(Norwegian Polar Institute Letters, Volume 119, May 1992)
- Zbigniew Jaworowski, Tom V. Segalstad, V. Hisdal


Keeping cool on global warming
(The Electricity Journal, Volume 5, Issue 6, pp. 32-41, July 1992)
- Frederick Seitz et al.


Do glaciers tell a true atmospheric CO2 story? (PDF)
(Science of the Total Environment, Volume 114, pp. 227-284, August 1992)
- Zbigniew Jaworowski, Tom V. Segalstad, N. Ono


The DMS-cloud albedo feedback effect: Greatly underestimated?
(Climatic Change, Volume 21, Number 4, pp. 429-433, August 1992)
- Sherwood B. Idso


Global Warming: A Reduced Threat?
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 73, Issue 10, pp. 1563–1577, October 1992)
- Patrick J. Michaels, David E. Stooksbury


Anthropo-generated Climate Change in Europe
(Environmental Conservation, Volume 19, Issue 4, pp. 349-353, December 1992)
- Robert C. Balling Jr., Sherwood B. Idso


Climatic change in Britain: Is SO2 more significant than CO2?
(Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 45, Number 4, pp. 251-256, December 1992)
- Robert C. Balling Jr., Sherwood B. Idso


Simulating Past and Forecasting Future Climates
(Environmental Conservation, Volume 20, Issue 4, pp. 339-346, 1993)
- Reid A. Bryson


Water vapor feedback and the ice age snowline record (PDF)
(Annales Geophysicae, Volume 11, Number 2-3, pp. 204-215, March 1993)
- De-Zheng Sun, Richard S. Lindzen


Distribution of Tropical Tropospheric Water Vapor (PDF)
(Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, Volume 50, Issue 12, pp. 1643-1660, June 1993)
- De-Zheng Sun, Richard S. Lindzen


A dissenting view on global climate change
(The Electricity Journal, Volume 6, Issue 6, pp. 62-69, July 1993)
- Henry R. Linden


Analysing Hydrometeorological Time Series for Evidence of Climatic Change (PDF)
(Nordic Hydrology, Volume 24, Number 2-3, pp. 135–150, August 1993)
- Geoff Kite


Review and impacts of climate change uncertainties
(Futures, Volume 25, Number 8, pp. 850-863, October 1993)
- M. E. Fernau, W. J. Makofske, D. W. South


Atmospheric CO2 residence time and the carbon cycle
(Energy, Volume 18, Issue 12, pp. 1297-1310, December 1993)
- Chauncey Starr


Temperature dependence of silicate weathering in nature: How strong a negative feedback on long-term accumulation of atmospheric CO2 and global greenhouse warming? (PDF)
(Geology, Volume 21, Issue 12, pp. 1059, December 1993)
- Michael Anthony Velbel


On the scientific basis for global warming scenarios (PDF)
(Environmental Pollution, Volume 83, Issues 1–2, pp. 125–134, 1994)
- Richard S. Lindzen


Climate Dynamics and Global Change
(Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics, Volume 26, pp. 353-378, January 1994)
- Richard S. Lindzen


Science does not support consensus' on climate change
(The Electricity Journal, Volume 7, Issue 1, pp. 78-85, February 1994)
- Henry R. Linden


A Critical Appraisal of the Global Warming Debate
(New Zealand Geographer, Volume 50, Issue 1, pp. 30-32, April 1994)
- C. R. de Freitas


Interpreting the Global Temperature Record
(Economic Affairs, Volume 14, Issue 3, pp. 18-21, April 1994)
- Robert C. Balling Jr.


Ancient atmosphere- Validity of ice records
(Environmental Science and Pollution Research, Volume 1, Number 3, September 1994)
- Zbigniew Jaworowski


Global Warming or Little Ice Age?
(Journal of Coastal Research, Issue 17, pp. 371-382, 1995)
- Theodor Landscheidt


Atmospheric greenhouse effect in the context of global climate change
(Il Nuovo Cimento C, Volume 18, Issue 2, pp. 123-151, March 1995)
- K. Ya. Kondratyev, C. Varotsos


The roles of carbon dioxide and water vapour in warming and cooling the earth's troposphere
(Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and Biomolecular Spectroscopy, Volume 51, Issue 3, pp. 415-417, March 1995)
- Jack Barrett


* Reply to comments by Sir John Houghton and Keith P. Shine on "The roles of carbon dioxide and water vapour in warming and cooling the Earth's troposphere" J. Barrett, Spectrochim. Acta Part A, 51 (3) (1995) 415
(Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and Biomolecular Spectroscopy, Volume 51, Issue 8, pp. 1395, July 1995)
- Jack Barrett


* Reply to Comment on "The role of carbon dioxide and water vapour in climate"
(Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and Biomolecular Spectroscopy, Volume 52, Issue 11, pp. 1567-1568, October 1996)
- Jack Barrett


Predicted and observed long night and day temperature trends (PDF)
(Atmospheric Research, Volume 37, Issues 1-3, pp. 257–266, July 1995)
- Patrick J. Michaels, Paul C. Knappenberger, D. A. Gay


Earth rotation, ocean circulation and paleoclimate
(GeoJournal, Volume 37, Number 4, pp. 419-430, December 1995)
- Nils-Axel Morner


Global Temperature Deviations as a Random Walk
(Journal of Climate, Volume 9, Issue 3, pp. 656–658, March 1996)
- Olavi Karner


Observed changes in the diurnal temperature and dewpoint cycles across the United States (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 23, Number 19, pp. 2637–2640, September 1996)
- Paul C. Knappenberger, Patrick J. Michaels, Peter D. Schwartzman


"The Wernerian syndrome"; aspects of global climate change; an analysis of assumptions, data, and conclusions
(Environmental Geosciences, Volume 3, Number 4, pp. 204-210, December 1996)
- Lee C. Gerhard


Why Carbon Dioxide Emissions Should Not Be Limited (PDF)
(Thermal Engineering, Volume 44, Number 2, pp. 85-89, 1997)
- V. V. Klimenko


How Dry is the Tropical Free Troposphere? Implications for Global Warming Theory (PDF)
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 78, Issue 6, pp. 1097–1106, June 1997)
- Roy W. Spencer, William D. Braswell


Time scales and trends in the central England temperature data (1659–1990): A wavelet analysis
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 24, Number 11, pp. 1351-1354, June 1997)
- Sallie Baliunas, Peter Frick, Dmitry Sokoloff, Willie Soon


CO2 and Climate: a Geologist's View (PDF)
(Space Science Reviews, Volume 81, Issue 1-2, pp. 173-198, July 1997)
- Harry N. A. Priem


Can increasing carbon dioxide cause climate change? (PDF)
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 94, Number 16, pp. 8335-8342, August 1997)
- Richard S. Lindzen


The continuing search for an anthropogenic climate change signal: Limitations of correlation-based approaches
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 24, Number 18, pp. 2319–2322, September 1997)
- David R. Legates, Robert E. Davis


On the climatic implications of volcanic cooling (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 103, Issue D6, pp. 5929-5942, March 1998)
- Richard S. Lindzen, Constantine Giannitsis


Analysis of trends in the variability of daily and monthly historical temperature measurements (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 10, Number 1, pp. 27-33, April 1998)
- Patrick J. Michaels, Robert C. Balling Jr., Russell S. Vose, Paul C. Knappenberger


Climate Variations and the Enhanced Greenhouse Effect
(Ambio, Volume 27, Number 4, pp. 270-274, June 1998)
- Wibjorn Karlen


Analysis of long-term European temperature records: 1751-1995 (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 10, Number 3, pp. 193-200, December 1998)
- R. C. Balling Jr, R. S. Vose, Gerd-Rainer Weber


Climate Chaotic Instability: Statistical Determination and Theoretical Background
(Environmetrics, Volume 8, Issue 5, pp. 517-532, December 1998)
- Raymond Sneyers


Climate Prediction as an Initial Value Problem (PDF)
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 79, Number 12, pp. 2743-2746, December 1998)
- Roger A. Pielke Sr.


Natural variability in an-ocean-atmosphere climate model
(Journal of Physics Malaysia, Volume 19, pp. 157-172, 1999)
- Eric S. Posmentier, Willie H. Soon, Sallie L. Baliunas


The carbon dioxide thermometer and the cause of global warming
(Energy & Environment, Volume 10, Number 1, pp. 1-18, January 1999)
- Nigel Calder


Human Contribution to Climate Change Remains Questionable (PDF)
(Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, Volume 80, Issue 16, pp. 183-183, April 1999)
- S. Fred Singer


Rate and Magnitude of Past Global Climate Changes
(Environmental Geosciences, Volume 6, Number 2, pp. 63-75, June 1999)
- John P. Bluemle, Joseph M. Sabel, Wibjorn Karlen


Geologic Constraints on Global Climate Variability
(Environmental Geosciences, Volume 6, Issue 3, page 152, September 1999)
- Lee C. Gerhard


Climate change in the Arctic and its empirical diagnostics
(Energy & Environment, Volume 10, Number 5, pp. 469-482, September 1999)
- V. V. Adamenko, K. Y. Kondratyev, C. A. Varotsos


An assessment of validation experiments conducted on computer models of global climate using the general circulation model of the UK's Hadley Centre
(Energy & Environment, Volume 10, Number 5, pp. 491-502, September 1999)
- Richard S. Courtney


Evidence Delimiting Past Global Climate Changes
(Environmental Geosciences, Volume 6, Issue 3, pp. 151, September 1999)
- John P. Bluemle, Joseph M. Sabel, Wibjorn Karlen


Environmental Effects of Increased Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 13, Number 2, pp. 149–164, October 1999)
- Willie H. Soon, Sallie L. Baliunas, Arthur B. Robinson, Zachary W. Robinson


Observed warming in cold anticyclones (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 14, Number 1, pp. 1–6, January 2000)
- Patrick J. Michaels, Paul C. Knappenberger, Robert C. Balling Jr., Robert E. Davis


Natural signals in the MSU lower tropospheric temperature record
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 27, Number 18, pp. 2905–2908, September 2000)
- Patrick J. Michaels, Paul C. Knappenberger


The cause of global warming (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 11, Number 6, pp. 613-629, November 2000)
- Vincent Gray


Evidence for decoupling of atmospheric CO2 and global climate during the Phanerozoic eon
(Nature, Volume 408, Number 6813, pp. 698-701, December 2000)
- Jan Veizer, Yves Godderis, Louis M. François


Reviewing the Uncertainties in Climate Change Science
(Area, Volume 32, Number 4, pp. 357-368, December 2000)
- Greg O'Hare


Differential trends in tropical sea surface and atmospheric temperatures since 1979
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 28, Number 1, pp. 183–186, January 2001)
- John R. Christy, D.E. Parker, S.J. Brown, I. Macadam, M. Stendel, William B. Norris


Vertical correlations of water vapor in GCMs (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 28, Number 2, pp. 259–262, January 2001)
- De-Zheng Sun, Curt Covey, Richard S. Lindzen


Sources of global warming in upper ocean temperature during El Nino
(Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, Volume 106, Issue C3, pp. 4349-4367, March 2001)
- Warren B. White et al.


Does CO2 really drive global warming? (PDF)
(Chemical Innovation, Volume 31, Number 5, pp. 44-46, May 2001)
- Robert H. Essenhigh


A sceptical view of climate change and water resources planning
(Irrigation and Drainage, Volume 50, Issue 3, pp. 221-226, July 2001)
- Geoff Kite


Is the enhancement of global warming important?
(Energy & Environment, Volume 12, Number 4, pp. 335-341, July 2001)
- M. C. R. Symons, Jack Barrett


Nature of observed temperature changes across the United States during the 20th century (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 17, Number 1, pp. 45–53, July 2001)
- Paul C. Knappenberger, Patrick J. Michaels, Robert E. Davis


Is the additional greenhouse effect already evident in the current climate?
(Fresenius' Journal of Analytical Chemistry, Volume 371, Number 6, pp. 791-797, November 2001)
- E. Raschke


Modeling climatic effects of anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions: unknowns and uncertainties (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 18, Number 3, pp. 259–275, November 2001)
- Willie H. Soon, Sallie L. Baliunas, Sherwood B. Idso, Kirill Ya. Kondratyev, Eric S. Posmentier


* Modeling climatic effects of anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions: unknowns and uncertainties. Reply to Risbey (2002) (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 22, Number 2, pp. 187–188, September 2002)
- Willie H. Soon, Sallie L. Baliunas, Sherwood B. Idso, Kirill Ya. Kondratyev, Eric S. Posmentier


* Modeling climatic effects of anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions: unknowns and uncertainties. Reply to Karoly et al. (2003) (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 24, Number 1, pp. 93–94, June 2003)
- Willie H. Soon, Sallie L. Baliunas, Sherwood B. Idso, Kirill Ya. Kondratyev, Eric S. Posmentier


Do deep ocean temperature records verify models? (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 29, Number 8, April 2002)
- Richard S. Lindzen


Problems in evaluating regional and local trends in temperature: an example from eastern Colorado, USA (PDF)
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 22, Issue 4, pp. 421-434, April 2002)
- Roger A. Pielke Sr. et al.


When Was The Hottest Summer? A State Climatologist Struggles for an Answer
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 83, Issue 5, pp. 723-734, May 2002)
- John R. Christy


Are observed changes in the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere really dangerous? (PDF)
(Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology, Volume 50, Number 2, pp. 297-327, June 2002)
- C. R. de Freitas


Reconciling observations of global temperature change (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 29, Issue 12, pp. 24-1, June 2002)
- Richard S. Lindzen, Constantine Giannitsis


Global Climate Models Violate Scaling of the Observed Atmospheric Variability (PDF)
(Physical Review Letters, Volume 89, Number 2, July 2002)
- R. B. Govindan et al.


Statistical analysis does not support a human influence on climate
(Energy & Environment, Volume 13, Number 3, pp. 329-331, July 2002)
- S. Fred Singer


On nonstationarity and antipersistency in global temperature series (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 107, Issue D20, October 2002)
- Olavi Karner


A multifractal point of view on climatological evolution
(La Houille Blanche, Number 8, pp. 31-33, December 2002)
- P. Hubert et al.


Phanerozoic Climatic Zones and Paleogeography with a Consideration of Atmospheric CO2 Levels
(Paleontological Journal, Volume 2, pp. 3-11, February 2003)
- A. J. Boucot et al.


Global Warming: Are We Confusing Cause and Effect?
(Energy Sources, Volume 25, Number 4, pp. 357-370, April 2003)
- Leonid F. Khilyuk


Climate Change - A Natural Hazard (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Number 2-3, pp. 215-232, May 2003)
- William Kininmonth


Global Warming: Myth or Reality? The Actual Evolution of the Weather Dynamics
(Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Number 2-3, pp. 297-322, May 2003)
- Marcel Leroux


New Little Ice Age Instead of Global Warming? (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Number 2-3, pp. 327-350, May 2003)
- Theodor Landscheidt


The "Greenhouse Effect" as a Function of Atmospheric Mass
(Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Number 2-3, pp. 351-356, May 2003)
- Hans Jelbring


Test for harmful collinearity among predictor variables used in modeling global temperature (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 24, Number 1, pp. 15-18, June 2003)
- David H. Douglass, B. David Clader, John R. Christy, Patrick J. Michaels, David A. Belsley


Global Warming (PDF)
(Progress in Physical Geography, Volume 27, Number 3, pp. 448-455, September 2003)
- Willie H. Soon, Sallie L. Baliunas


On the Coherence between Dynamics of the World Fuel Consumption and Global Temperature Anomaly (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Number 6, pp. 773-782, November 2003)
- L. B. Klyashtorin, A. A. Lyubushin


Likelihood of Rapidly Increasing Surface Temperatures Unaccompanied by Strong Warming in the Free Troposphere (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 25, Number 3, pp. 185-190, January 2004)
- T. N. Chase, Roger A. Pielke Sr., B. Herman, X. Zeng


Climate change: detection and attribution of trends from long-term geologic data
(Ecological Modelling, Volume 171, Issue 4, pp. 433-450, February 2004)
- Craig Loehle


Estimation and representation of long-term (>40 year) trends of Northern-Hemisphere-gridded surface temperature: A note of caution (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Number 3, February 2004)
- Willie H. Soon, David R. Legates, Sallie L. Baliunas


Industrial CO2 emissions as a proxy for anthropogenic influence on lower tropospheric temperature trends (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Number 5, March 2004)
- A. T. J. de Laat, A. N. Maurellis


A test of corrections for extraneous signals in gridded surface temperature data (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 26, Number 2, pp. 159-173, May 2004)
- Ross McKitrick, Patrick J. Michaels


* Are temperature trends affected by economic activity? Reply to Benestad (2004) (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 27, Number 2, pp. 175–176, October 2004)
- Ross McKitrick, Patrick J. Michaels


* A test of corrections for extraneous signals in gridded surface temperature data: Erratum (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 27, Number 3, pp. 265-268, December 2004)
- Ross McKitrick, Patrick J. Michaels


Altitude dependence of atmospheric temperature trends: Climate models versus observation (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Number 13, July 2004)
- David H. Douglass, Benjamin D. Pearson, S. Fred Singer


Disparity of tropospheric and surface temperature trends: New evidence (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Number 13, July 2004)
- David H. Douglass, Benjamin D. Pearson, S. Fred Singer, Paul C. Knappenberger, Patrick J. Michaels


Key Aspects of Global Climate Change
(Energy & Environment, Volume 15, Number 3, pp. 469-503, July 2004)
- K. Y. Kondratyev


Nonlinearities, Feedbacks and Critical Thresholds within the Earth's Climate System (PDF)
(Climatic Change, Volume 65, Number 1-2, pp. 11-38, July 2004)
- Jose A. Rial et al.


Water in the Atmosphere (PDF)
(Journal of Chemical Education, Volume 81, Issue 8, pp. 1229, August 2004)
- Joel M. Kauffman


Climate change: Conflict of observational science, theory, and politics (PDF)
(AAPG Bulletin, Volume 88, Number 9, pp. 1211-1220, September 2004)
- Lee C. Gerhard


* Climate change: Conflict of observational science, theory, and politics: Reply
(AAPG Bulletin, Volume 90, Number 3, pp. 409-412, March 2006)
- Lee C. Gerhard


Global warming and long-term climatic changes: a progress report (PDF)
(Environmental Geology, Volume 46, Issue 6-7, pp. 970-979, October 2004)
- L. F. Khilyuk, G. V. Chilingar


Global Warming and the Accumulation of Carbon Dioxide in the Atmosphere
(Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 1, pp. 101-126, January 2005)
- Arthur Rorsch, Richard S. Courtney, Dick Thoenes


Iceland as a heat island (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Number 3, February 2005)
- David H. Douglass, V. Patel, Robert S. Knox


* Reply to comments by H. Bjornsson et al. on "Iceland as a heat island" (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Number 24, December 2005)
- David H. Douglass, V. Patel, Robert S. Knox


Climate forcing by the volcanic eruption of Mount Pinatubo (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Number 5, March 2005)
- David H. Douglass, Robert S. Knox


* Reply to comment by A. Robock on "Climate forcing by the volcanic eruption of Mount Pinatubo" (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Number 20, October 2005)
- David H. Douglass, Robert S. Knox


* Reply to comment by T. M. L. Wigley et al. on "Climate forcing by the volcanic eruption of Mount Pinatubo" (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Number 20, October 2005)
- David H. Douglass, Robert S. Knox


Global warming and the mining of oceanic methane hydrate
(Topics in Catalysis, Volume 32, Issue 3-4, pp. 95-99, March 2005)
- Chung-Chieng Lai, David Dietrich, Malcolm Bowman


The Interaction of Climate Change and the Carbon Dioxide Cycle
(Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 2, pp. 217-238, March 2005)
- Arthur Rorsch, Richard S. Courtney, Dick Thoenes


Discussions on Climate Change as Presented in Nature, 2004
(Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 2, pp. 335-348, March 2005)
- Jack Barrett


Expected halt in the current global warming trend?
(Renewable Energy, Volume 30, Issue 5, pp. 743–752, April 2005)
- Ernest C. Njau


Some examples of negative feedback in the Earth climate system (PDF)
(Central European Journal of Physics, Volume 3, Number 2, June 2005)
- Olavi Karner


The Global Warming Debate: A Review of the State of Science (PDF)
(Pure and Applied Geophysics, Volume 162, Issue 8-9, pp. 1557-1586, August 2005)
- Madhav L. Khandekar, T. S. Murty, P. Chittibabu


Greenhouse molecules, their spectra and function in the atmosphere (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 6, pp. 1037-1045, November 2005)
- Jack Barrett


Nature's style: Naturally trendy (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Number 23, December 2005)
- Timothy A. Cohn, Harry F. Lins


Seductive Simulations? Uncertainty Distribution Around Climate Models (PDF)
(Social Studies of Science, Volume 35, Number 6, pp. 895-922, December 2005)
- Myanna Lahsen


Global climate changes: Antidogmatron (PDF)
(Geographica Pannonica, Volume 10, pp. 9-13, 2006)
- Milan Radovanovic, Mirceta Vemic, Ivan Popovic


Methodology and Results of Calculating Central California Surface Temperature Trends: Evidence of Human-Induced Climate Change? (PDF)
(Journal of Climate, Volume 19, Issue 4, February 2006)
- John R. Christy, William B. Norris, K. Redmond, K. Gallo


* Reply to Comments on "Methodology and Results of Calculating Central California Surface Temperature Trends: Evidence of Human-Induced Climate Change?"
(Journal of Climate, Volume 20, Issue 7, September 2007)
- John R. Christy, William B. Norris, K. Gallo


Prediction of the Standard Atmosphere Profiles of Temperature, Pressure, and Density with Height for the Lower Atmosphere by Solution of the (S−S) Integral Equations of Transfer and Evaluation of the Potential for Profile Perturbation by Combustion Emissions
(Energy Fuels, Volume 20, Issue 3, pp. 1057-1067, May 2006)
- Robert H. Essenhigh


On the sensitivity of the atmosphere to the doubling of the carbon dioxide concentration and on water vapour feedback
(Energy & Environment, Volume 17, Number 4, pp. 603-607, July 2006)
- Jack Barrett, David Bellamy, Heinz Hug


On global forces of nature driving the Earth's climate. Are humans involved?
(Environmental Geology, Volume 50, Number 6, pp. 899-910, August 2006)
- L. F. Khilyuk, G. V. Chilingar


* Response to W. Aeschbach-Hertig rebuttal of "On global forces of nature driving the Earth’s climate. Are humans involved?" by L. F. Khilyuk and G. V. Chilingar
(Environmental Geology, Volume 54, Number 7, pp. 1567-1572, June 2008)
- L. F. Khilyuk, G. V. Chilingar


Conflicting Signals of Climatic Change in the Upper Indus Basin (PDF)
(Journal of Climate, Volume 19, Issue 17, pp. 4276–4293, September 2006)
- H. J. Fowler, D. R. Archer


Uncertainties in assessing global warming during the 20th century: disagreement between key data sources
(Energy & Environment, Volume 17, Number 5, pp. 685-706, September 2006)
- Maxim Ogurtsov, Markus Lindholm


Temperature trends in the lower atmosphere (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 17, Number 5, pp. 707-714, September 2006)
- Vincent Gray


Thermocline flux exchange during the Pinatubo event (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Issue 19, October 2006)
- D. H. Douglass, R. S. Knox, B. D. Pearson, A. Clark Jr


Climate Change Reexamined (PDF)
(Journal of Scientific Exploration, Volume 21, Number 4, pp. 723–749, 2007)
- Joel M. Kauffman


Are there connections between the Earth's magnetic field and climate? (PDF)
(Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 253, Issues 3-4, pp. 328-339, January 2007)
- Vincent Courtillot et al.


* Response to comment on "Are there connections between Earth's magnetic field and climate?, Earth Planet. Sci. Lett., 253, 328–339, 2007" by Bard, E., and Delaygue, M., Earth Planet. Sci. Lett., in press, 2007 (PDF)
(Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 265, Issues 1-2, pp. 308-311, January 2008)
- Vincent Courtillot et al.


Multi-scale analysis of global temperature changes and trend of a drop in temperature in the next 20 years (PDF)
(Meteorology and Atmospheric Physics, Volume 95, January 2007)
- Lin Zhen-Shan, Sun Xian


Greenhouse effect in semi-transparent planetary atmospheres (PDF)
(Quarterly Journal of the Hungarian Meteorological Service, Volume 111, Number 1, pp. 1-40, January-March 2007)
- Ferenc M. Miskolczi


Does a Global Temperature Exist? (PDF)
(Journal of Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics, Volume 32, Issue 1, pp. 1–27, February 2007)
- Christopher Essex, Ross McKitrick, Bjarne Andresen


180 years of atmospheric CO2 gas analysis by chemical methods (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 2, pp. 259-282, March 2007)
- Ernst-Georg Beck


* Comments on "180 years of Atmospheric CO2 Gas Analysis by Chemical Methods" (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 5, pp. 641-646, September 2007)
- Ernst-Georg Beck


Climate Change is Nothing New! (PDF)
(New Concepts In Global Tectonics, Number 42, pp. 3-17, March 2007)
- Lance Endersbee


Implications of the Secondary Role of Carbon Dioxide and Methane Forcing in Climate Change: Past, Present, and Future (PDF)
(Physical Geography, Volume 28, Number 2, pp. 97-125, March 2007)
- Willie H. Soon


Climate stability: an inconvenient proof
(Proceedings of the ICE - Civil Engineering, Volume 160, Issue 2, pp. 66-72, May 2007)
- David Bellamy, Jack Barrett


Environmental Effects of Increased Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide (PDF)
(Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons, Volume 12, Number 3, pp. 79-90, Fall 2007)
- Arthur B. Robinson, Noah E. Robinson, Willie H. Soon


Climate outlook to 2030 (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 5, pp. 615-619, September 2007)
- David C. Archibald


On a possibility of estimating the feedback sign of the Earth climate system (PDF)
(Proceedings of the Estonian Academy of Sciences: Engineering, Volume 13, Number 3, pp. 260-268, September 2007)
- Olavi Karner


Formulations of human-induced variations in global temperature (PDF)
(Renewable Energy, Volume 32, Issue 13, pp. 2211–2222, October 2007)
- Ernest C. Njau


Evolution of the Earth's Global Climate
(Energy Sources, Volume 29, Issue 1, pp. 1-19, November 2007)
- O. G. Sorokhtin, G. V. Chilingar, L. F. Khilyuk, M. V. Gorfunkel


A comparison of tropical temperature trends with model predictions (PDF)
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 28, Issue 13, pp. 1693-1701, December 2007)
- David H. Douglass, John R. Christy, Benjamin D. Pearson, S. Fred Singer


* Addendum to A comparison of tropical temperature trends with model Predictions (PDF)
(Submitted to the International Journal of Climatology, 2007)
- David H. Douglass, John R. Christy, Benjamin D. Pearson, S. Fred Singer


* An updated comparison of model ensemble and observed temperature trends in the tropical troposphere (PDF)
(Submitted to the International Journal of Climatology, 2009)
- Stephen McIntyre, Ross McKitrick


Global Warming: Forecasts by Scientists Versus Scientific Forecasts (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 7-8, pp. 997-1021, December 2007)
- Kesten C. Green, J. Scott Armstrong


Limits on climate sensitivity derived from recent satellite and surface observations (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 112, Issue D24, December 2007)
- Petr Chylek et al.


Quantifying the influence of anthropogenic surface processes and inhomogeneities on gridded global climate data (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 112, Issue D24, December 2007)
- Ross R. McKitrick, Patrick J. Michaels


Taking GreenHouse Warming Seriously (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 7-8, pp. 937-950, December 2007)
- Richard S. Lindzen


The Fraud Allegation Against Some Climatic Research of Wei-Chyung Wang (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 7-8, pp. 985-995, December 2007)
- Douglas J. Keenan


Temporal Variability in Local Air Temperature Series Shows Negative Feedback (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 7-8, pp. 1059-1072, December 2007)
- Olavi Karner


Cooling of Atmosphere Due to CO2 Emission (PDF)
(Energy Sources, Volume 30, Issue 1, pp. 1-9, January 2008)
- G. V. Chilingar, L. F. Khilyuk, O. G. Sorokhtin


The Spatial Pattern and Mechanisms of Heat-Content Change in the North Atlantic (PDF)
(Science, Volume 319, Number 5864, pp. 800-803, February 2008)
- M. Susan Lozier et al.


Scientific Consensus on Climate Change? (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 19, Number 2, pp. 281-286, March 2008)
- Klaus-Martin Schulte


Evidence for "publication Bias" Concerning Global Warming in Science and Nature
(Energy & Environment, Volume 19, Number 2, pp. 287-301, March 2008)
- Patrick J. Michaels


Useless Arithmetic: Ten Points to Ponder When Using Mathematical Models in Environmental Decision Making (PDF)
(Public Administration Review, Volume 68, Issue 3, pp. 470-479, March 2008)
- Linda Pilkey-Jarvis, Orrin H. Pilkey


Global Climate Change
(Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power, Volume 113, Issue 3, pp. 448-455, April 2008)
- R. H. Hammerle et al.


An Alternative View of Climate Change for Steelmakers (PDF)
(Iron & Steel Technology, Volume 5, Number 7, pp. 87-98, July 2008)
- John Stubbles


Human population and carbon dioxide
(Energy Policy, Volume 36, Issue 7, pp. 2761-2764, July 2008)
- William M. Schaffer


On the credibility of climate predictions (PDF)
(Hydrological Sciences Journal, Volume 53, Number 4, pp. 671-684, August 2008)
- D. Koutsoyiannis, A. Efstratiadis et al.


Knock, Knock: Where Is the Evidence for Dangerous Human-caused Global Warming? (PDF)
(Economic Analysis and Policy, Volume 38, Issue 2, pp. 177-202, September 2008)
- Robert M. Carter


* Reply to the Comment of Robert E.T. Ward by Robert M. Carter (PDF)
(Economic Analysis and Policy, Volume 40, Issue 2, pp. 145-146, September 2010)
- Robert M. Carter


Reconsideration of Climate Change from the Viewpoints of Greenhouse Gas Types and Time Scale
(Energy & Environment, Volume 19, Number 5, pp. 691-705, September 2008)
- Ryunosuke Kikuchi


Potential Biases in Feedback Diagnosis from Observational Data: A Simple Model Demonstration (PDF)
(Journal of Climate, Volume 21, Issue 21, November 2008)
- Roy W. Spencer, William D. Braswell


Recent Changes in the Climate: Natural or Forced by Human Activity
(Ambio, Volume 37, Number sp14, pp. 483–488, November 2008)
- Wibjorn Karlen


Rate of Increasing Concentrations of Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Controlled by Natural Temperature Variations (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 19, Number 7, pp. 995-1011, December 2008)
- Fred Goldberg


Computer Study of Cluster Mechanism of Anti-greenhouse Effect
(International Journal of Environmental Science and Engineering, Volume 1, Number 1, pp. 31-38, Winter 2009)
- A. Galashev


Climate Change and the Earth's Magnetic Poles, A Possible Connection (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 1-2, pp. 75-83, January 2009)
- Adrian K. Kerton


Cooling of the Global Ocean Since 2003 (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 1-2, pp. 101-104, January 2009)
- Craig Loehle


Sources and Sinks of Carbon Dioxide (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 1-2, pp. 105-121, January 2009)
- Tom Quirk


Earth's Temperature / CO2 Equilibrium Prior to 1850
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 1-2, pp. 191-196, January 2009)
- Martin D. Cropp


Falsification Of The Atmospheric CO2 Greenhouse Effects Within The Frame Of Physics (PDF)
(International Journal of Modern Physics B, Volume 23, Issue 3, pp. 275-364, January 2009)
- Gerhard Gerlich, Ralf D. Tscheuschner


* Reply to "Comment on 'Falsification Of The Atmospheric CO2 Greenhouse Effects Within The Frame Of Physics' by Joshua B. Halpern, Christopher M. Colose, Chris H0-Stuart, Joel D. Shore, Arthur P. Smith, Jorg Zimmermann" (PDF)
(International Journal of Modern Physics B, Volume 24, Issue 10, pp. 1333-1359, April 2010)
- Gerhard Gerlich, Ralf D. Tscheuschner


Global warming and carbon dioxide through sciences (PDF)
(Environment International, Volume 35, Issue 2, pp. 390-401, February 2009)
- Georgios A. Florides, Paul Christodoulides


Oceanic influences on recent continental warming (PDF)
(Climate Dynamics, Volume 32, Issue 2-3, pp. 333-342, February 2009)
- G. P. Compo, P. D. Sardeshmukh


Trends in middle- and upper-level tropospheric humidity from NCEP reanalysis data (PDF)
(Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 98, Issue 3-4, pp. 351-359, February 2009)
- Garth Paltridge, Albert Arking, Michael Pook


* Science Debates Must Continue
(Energy & Environment, Volume 23, Number 8, pp. 1483-1488, December 2012)
- Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen


Potential Dependence of Global Warming on the Residence Time (RT) in the Atmosphere of Anthropogenically Sourced Carbon Dioxide
(Energy & Fuels, Volume 23, Number 5, pp. 2773–2784, April 2009)
- Robert H. Essenhigh


Climate as a Result of the Earth Heat Reflection (PDF)
(Latvian Journal of Physics and Technical Sciences, Volume 46, Number 2, pp. 29-40, May 2009)
- J. Barkans, D. Zalostiba


Climate Change -- What Does the Research Mean?
(Chemical Engineering Progress. Volume 105, Number 6, pp. 20-25, June 2009)
- Michael J. Economides, Xie Xina


Surface Temperature Variations in East Africa and Possible Causes
(Journal of Climate, Volume 22, Issue 12, pp. 3342–335, June 2009)
- John R. Christy, William B. Norris, Richard T. McNider


Climate projections: Past performance no guarantee of future skill? (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 36, Number 13, July 2009)
- Catherine Reifen, Ralf Toumi


Influence of the Southern Oscillation on tropospheric temperature (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 114, Issue D14, July 2009)
- John D. McLean, Chris de Freitas, Robert M. Carter


* Correction to "Influence of the Southern Oscillation on tropospheric temperature"
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 114, October 2009)
- John D. McLean, Chris de Freitas, Robert M. Carter


* Response to "Comment on ‘Influence of the Southern Oscillation on tropospheric temperature'" by Foster et al. (PDF)
(Submitted to the Journal of Geophysical Research, 2010)
- John D. McLean, Chris de Freitas, Robert M. Carter


* Comment on "Influence of the Southern Oscillation on tropospheric temperature" by J. D. McLean, C. R. de Freitas, and R. M. Carter (PDF)
(Submitted to the Journal of Geophysical Research, 2009)
- David R. B. Stockwell, Anthony Cox


Ocean heat content and Earth's radiation imbalance (PDF)
(Physics Letters A, Volume 373, Issue 36, pp. 3296-3300, August 2009)
- David H. Douglass, Robert S. Knox


On the determination of climate feedbacks from ERBE data (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 36, Number 16, August 2009)
- Richard S. Lindzen, Yong-Sang Choi


* On the observational determination of climate sensitivity and its implications (PDF)
(Submitted to Journal of Geophysical Research, February 2010)
- Richard S. Lindzen, Yong-Sang Choi


Recent climate observations disagreement with projections (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 4, pp. 595-596, August 2009)
- David R. B. Stockwell


Greenhouse gases and greenhouse effect
(Environmental Geology, Volume 58, Issue 6, pp. 1207-1213, September 2009)
- G. V. Chilingar, O. G. Sorokhtin, L. F. Khilyuk, M. V. Gorfunkel


A Surfeit of Cycles (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 6, pp. 985-996, October 2009)
- William M. Schaffer


Validity of climate change forecasting for public policy decision making (PDF)
(International Journal of Forecasting, Volume 25, Issue 4, pp. 826-832, October-December 2009)
- Kesten C. Green, J. Scott Armstrong, Willie Soon


Is the airborne fraction of anthropogenic CO2 emissions increasing? (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 36, Number 21, November 2009)
- Wolfgang Knorr


On the Confusion of Planck Feedback Parameters
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 7, pp. 1057-1066, November 2009)
- Kyoji Kimoto


Late 20th Century Warmed Within Natural Limits: Evidence from Gaussian Distributions
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 7, pp. 1075-1085, November 2009)
- Peter Jelffs


Trend Analysis of Satellite Global Temperature Data (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 7, pp. 1087-1098, November 2009)
- Craig Loehle


Gravitation and Gas Laws: An Alternative Approach to Climatology
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 7, pp. 1141-1147, November 2009)
- Wolfgang Brune


On the Increased Rate of Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Accumulation 1980-2008
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 7, pp. 1149-1154, November 2009)
- Jarl R. Ahlbeck


Ensemble reconstruction constraints on the global carbon cycle sensitivity to climate (PDF)
(Nature, Volume 463, Number 7280, pp. 527-530, January 2010)
- David C. Frank et al.


Origin of Earth's Ice Ages
(Energy Sources, Volume 32, Issue 2, pp. 101-107, January 2010)
- O. G. Sorokhtin, G. V. Chilingar, L. Khilyuk, M. V. Gorfunkel


Socioeconomic Patterns in Climate Data (PDF)
(Journal of Economic and Social Measurement, Volume 35, Number 3-4, pp. 149-175, January 2010)
- Ross McKitrick, Nicolas Nierenberg


Modeling of the Earth’s Planetary Heat Balance with Electrical Circuit Analogy (PDF)
(Journal of Electromagnetic Analysis and Applications, Volume 2, Number 3, pp. 133-138, March 2010)
- Habibullo I. Abdussamatov, Alexander I. Bogoyavlenskii, Sergey I. Khankov, Yevgeniy V. Lapovok


No climate paradox under the faint early Sun
(Nature, Volume 464, Number 7287, pp. 744-747, April 2010)
- Minik T. Rosing et al.


* Rosing, Bird, Sleep & Bjerrum reply
(Nature, Volume 474, Number 7349, pp. E1, June 2011)
- Minik T. Rosing et al.


Why Hasn't Earth Warmed as Much as Expected? (PDF)
(Journal of Climate, Volume 23, Issue 10, pp. 2453–2464, May 2010)
- Stephen E. Schwartz et al.


What is the Major Culprit for Global Warming: CFCs or CO2? (PDF)
(Journal of Cosmology, Volume 8, pp. 1846-1862, June 2010)
- Qing-Bin Lu


Atmospheric Oscillations do not Explain the Temperature-Industrialization Correlation (PDF)
(Statistics, Politics, and Policy, Volume 1, Issue 1, pp. 1–18, July 2010)
- Ross McKitrick


How would global-mean temperature change in the 21st century? (PDF)
(Chinese Science Bulletin, Volume 55, Number 19, pp. 1963-1967, July 2010)
- WeiHong Qian et al.


On the Meaning of Feedback Parameter, Transient Climate Response, and the Greenhouse Effect: Basic Considerations and the Discussion of Uncertainties (PDF)
(The Open Atmospheric Science Journal, Volume 4, Issue 1, pp. 137-159, July 2010)
- Gerhard Kramm, Ralph Dlugi


* Reply to the "Comments on the Paper 'On the Meaning of Feedback Parameter, Transient Climate Response, and the Greenhouse Effect: Basic Considerations and the Discussion of Uncertainties' by Rainer Link and Horst-Joachim Lüdecke" (PDF)
(Submitted to The Open Atmospheric Science Journal, 2011)
- Gerhard Kramm, Ralph Dlugi


Twentieth Century Sources of Methane in the Atmosphere
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 3, pp. 251-266, July 2010)
- Tom Quirk


El Nino–Southern Oscillation: Magnitudes and asymmetry (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, Volume 115, Issue D15, August 2010)
- David H. Douglass


Introductory paper on paradigm shift Should we change emphasis in greenhouse-effect research?
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 4, pp. 165-169, August 2010)
- Arthur Rorsch


A null hypothesis for CO2 (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 4, pp. 171-200, August 2010)
- Roy Clark


Note on the Miskolczi theory
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 4, pp. 277-292, August 2010)
- Noor van Andel


On the diagnosis of radiative feedback in the presence of unknown radiative forcing (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 115, Issue D16, August 2010)
- Roy W. Spencer, William D. Braswell


Tropical rainstorm feedback
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 4, pp. 217-224, August 2010)
- Noor van Andel


A natural constraint to anthropogenic global warming (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 4, pp. 225-236, August 2010)
- William Kininmonth


The stabilising effect of the oceans on climate
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 4, pp. 237-240, August 2010)
- Dick Thoenes


The stable stationary value of the earth's global average atmospheric Planck-weighted greenhouse-gas optical thickness
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 4, pp. 243-262, August 2010)
- Ferenc M. Miskolczi


The thermodynamic relationship between surface temperature and water vapour concentration in the troposphere
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 4, pp. 263-275, August 2010)
- William C. Gilbert


A stable boundary layer perspective on global temperature trends
(IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science, Volume 13, Number 1, pp. 1-14, September 2010)
- Richard T. McNider, John R. Christy, A. Biazar


Multidecadal Tendencies in ENSO and Global Temperatures Related to Multidecadal Oscillations (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 5, pp. 437-460, September 2010)
- Joseph D'Aleo, Don Easterbrook


Topology of Earth’s climate indices and phase-locked states (PDF)
(Physics Letters A, Volume 374, Issue 40, pp. 4164-4168, September 2010)
- David H. Douglass


What Do Observational Datasets Say about Modeled Tropospheric Temperature Trends since 1979? (PDF)
(Remote Sensing, Volume 2, Issue 9, pp. 2148-2169, September 2010)
- John R. Christy, Benjamin Herman, Roger Pielke Sr., Philip Klotzbach, Richard T. McNider, Justin J. Hnilo, Roy W. Spencer, Thomas Chase, David Douglass


A comparison of local and aggregated climate model outputs with observed data
(Hydrological Sciences Journal, Volume 55, Issue 7, pp. 1094-111, October 2010)
- G. G. Anagnostopoulos, D. Koutsoyiannis, A. Christofides, A. Efstratiadis, N. Mamassis


A Materials Scientist Ponders Global Warming/Cooling
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 6, pp. 611-632, October 2010)
- Anthony Kelly


Panel and multivariate methods for tests of trend equivalence in climate data series (PDF)
(Atmospheric Science Letters, Volume 11, Issue 4, pp. 270–277, October/December 2010)
- Ross McKitrick, Stephen McIntyre, Chad Herman


On the recovery from the Little Ice Age (PDF)
(Natural Science, Volume 2, Number 7, pp. 1211-1224, November 2010)
- Syun-Ichi Akasofu


Recent Energy Balance of Earth
(International Journal of Geoscience, Volume 1, Number 3, pp. 99-101, November 2010)
- Robert S. Knox, David H. Douglass


Warming Power of CO2 and H2O: Correlations with Temperature Changes
(International Journal of Geosciences, Volume 1, Number 3, pp. 102-112, November 2010)
- Paulo Cesar Soares


External Forces Acting on the Earth's Climate: An Approach to Understanding the Complexity of Climate Change
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 8, pp. 953-968, December 2010)
- Ryunosuke Kikuchi


On some achievements and major problems in mathematical modeling of climatic characteristics of the Ocean (critical analysis)
(Izvestiya, Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics, Volume 46, Issue 6, pp. 668-676, December 2010)
- A. S. Sarkisyan


Uncertainty in the Global Average Surface Air Temperature Index: A Representative Lower Limit
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 8, pp. 969-989, December 2010)
- Patrick Frank


Spectral Analysis of the Svalbard Temperature Record 1912–2010
(Advances in Meteorology, Volume 2011, pp. 1-14, 2011)
- Ole Humlum, Jan-Erik Solheim, Kjell Stordahl


Second thoughts on global warming
(Kybernetes, Volume 40, Issue 1/2, pp. 327-329, 2011)
- Alex M. Andrew


Global Warming: A Critique of the Anthropogenic Model and its Consequences (PDF)
(Geoscience Canada, Volume 38, Number 1, pp. 41-48, March 2011)
- Norman R. Paterson


The 158-Year Climate Experiment
(Energy & Environment, Volume 22, Number 3, pp. 219-232, April 2011)
- Joseph F. Boston


The Methane Misconceptions
(Energy & Environment, Volume 22, Number 3, pp. 233-240, April 2011)
- Wilson Flood


Lack of Consistency Between Modeled and Observed Temperature Trends (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 22, Number 4, pp. 375-406, June 2011)
- S. Fred Singer


Imposed and Neglected Uncertainty in the Global Average Surface Air Temperature Index (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 22, Number 4, pp. 407-424, June 2011)
- Patrick Frank


Climate Change Attribution Using Empirical Decomposition of Climatic Data (PDF)
(The Open Atmospheric Science Journal, Volume 5, pp. 74-86, July 2011)
- Craig Loehle, Nicola Scafetta


* Supplementary Material (PDF)
(The Open Atmospheric Science Journal, Volume 5, July 2011)
- Craig Loehle, Nicola Scafetta


Is Global Warming Mainly Due to Anthropogenic Greenhouse Gas Emissions?
(Energy Sources, Volume 33, Issue 21, pp. 1985-1992, August 2011)
- Xiaobing Zhaoa


Long-Term Instrumental and Reconstructed Temperature Records Contradict Anthropogenic Global Warming
(Energy & Environment, Volume 22, Number 6, pp. 723-745, August 2011)
- Horst-Joachim Lüdecke


On the Misdiagnosis of Surface Temperature Feedbacks from Variations in Earth’s Radiant Energy Balance (PDF)
(Remote Sensing, Volume 3, Issue 8, pp. 1603-1613, August 2011)
- Roy W. Spencer, William D. Braswell


On the warming in the tropical upper troposphere: Models versus observations (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 38, Number 15, August 2011)
- Qiang Fu et al.


A Parameterised Carbon Feedback Model for the Calculation of Global Warming from Attainable Fossil Fuel Emissions
(Energy & Environment, Volume 22, Number 7, pp. 859-876, October 2011)
- Willem P. Nel


Global warming, human-induced carbon emissions, and their uncertainties (PDF)
(Science China Earth Sciences, Volume 54, Number 10, pp. 1458-1468, October 2011)
- JingYun Fang et al.


How Natural is the Recent Centennial Warming? An Analysis of 2249 Surface Temperature Records (PDF)
(International Journal of Modern Physics C, Volume: 22, Issue 10, pp. 1139-1159, October 2011)
- Horst-Joachim Ludecke et al.


Why is global warming slowing down?
(Doklady Earth Sciences, Volume 440, Issue 2, pp. 1419-1422, October 2011)
- V. V. Klimenko


Identifying natural contributions to late Holocene climate change
(Global and Planetary Change, Volume 79, Issues 1–2, pp. 145–156, October–November 2011)
- Ole Humlum et al.


Separation of a Signal of Interest from a Seasonal Effect in Geophysical Data: I. El Nino/La Nina Phenomenon (PDF)
(International Journal of Geosciences, Volume 2, Issue 4, pp. 414-419, November 2011)
- David H. Douglass


Scrutinizing the atmospheric greenhouse effect and its climatic impact (PDF)
(Natural Science, Volume 3, Number 12, pp. 971-998, December 2011)
- Gerhard Kramm, Ralph Dlugi


Temperature Estimates from Models and Observations
(Energy & Environment, Volume 22, Number 8, pp. 1059-1068, December 2011)
- Philip Symmons


The potential peatland extent and carbon sink in Sweden, as related to the Peatland / Ice Age Hypothesis (PDF)
(Mires and Peat, Volume 10, Article 8, 2012)
- L. G. Franzen et al.


Short Term Global DT Prediction Using (60-70)-Years Periodicity
(Energy & Environment, Volume 23, Number 1, pp. 75-86, January 2012)
- Alexey A. Lyubushin, Leonid B. Klyashtorin


Climate Change: Sources of Warming in the Late 20th Century
(Energy & Environment, Volume 23, Number 1, pp. 95-104, January 2012)
- Gerald E. Marsh


Climate stability and sensitivity in some simple conceptual models
(Climate Dynamics, Volume 38, Issue 3-4, pp. 455-473, February 2012)
- J. Ray Bates


Global cloud height fluctuations measured by MISR on Terra from 2000 to 2010
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 39, Number 3, February 2012)
- Roger Davies, Matthew Molloy


Ocean Heat Content And Earth’s Radiation Imbalance II. Relation To Climate Shifts (PDF)
(Physics Letters A, Volume 376, Issues 12–13, pp. 1085-1178, February 2012)
- David H. Douglass, Robert S. Knox


* Reply to "Comment on 'Ocean heat content and Earthʼs radiation imbalance. II. Relation to climate shifts'" by Nuccitelli et al. (PDF)
(Physics Letters A, Volume 376, Issues 47–48, pp. 3673–3675, November 2012)
David H. Douglass, Robert S. Knox


Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation and Northern Hemisphere’s climate variability
(Climate Dynamics, Volume 38, Issue 5-6, pp. 929-949, March 2012)
- Marcia Glaze Wyatt et al.

Climate Science: Is it currently designed to answer questions? (PDF)
(Euresis Journal, Volume 2, pp. 161-192, March 2012)
- Richard S. Lindzen


On the Observed Trends and Changes in Global Sea Surface Temperature and Air-Sea Heat Fluxes (1984-2006)
(Journal of Climate, Volume 25 Issue 18, pp. 6123-6135, September 2012)
- W. G. Large, S. G. Yeager


Applying Econometrics to the Carbon Dioxide "Control Knob"
(The Scientific World Journal, Volume 2012, pp. 1-12, May 2012)
- Timothy Curtin


Climate physics, feedbacks, and reductionism (and when does reductionism go too far?)
(The European Physical Journal Plus, Volume 127, Number 5, pp. 1-15, May 2012)
- Richard S. Lindzen


The Roles of Greenhouse Gases in Global Warming
(Energy & Environment, Volume 23, Number 5, pp. 781-800, July 2012)
- Antero V. E. Ollila


The Night Time Radiative Transport Between the Earth's Surface, Its Atmosphere, and Free Space (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 23, Number 5, pp. 819-832, July 2012)
- Martin Hertzberg


The First Decade of the New Century: A Cooling Trend for Most of Alaska (PDF)
(The Open Atmospheric Science Journal, Volume 6, pp. 111-116, August 2012)
- G. Wendler et al.


Polynomial cointegration tests of anthropogenic impact on global warming (PDF)
(Earth System Dynamics, Volume 3, Number 2, pp. 97-279, November 2012)
- M. Beenstock, Y. Reingewertz, N. Paldor


* Reply to Hendry and Pretis (PDF)
(Earth System Dynamics, Volume 4, Discussion C118, March 2013)
- M. Beenstock, Y. Reingewertz, N. Paldor


Evaluating explanatory models of the spatial pattern of surface climate trends using model selection and bayesian averaging methods (PDF)
(Climate Dynamics, Volume 39, Issue 12, pp. 2867-2882, December 2012)
- Ross McKitrick, Lise Tole


Problems of climate as a problem of optics
(Journal of Optical Technology, Volume 80, Issue 11, pp. 717-721, 2013)
- S. V. Avakyan


Update of the Chronology of Natural Signals in the Near-Surface Mean Global Temperature Record and the Southern Oscillation Index (PDF)
(International Journal of Geosciences, Volume 4, Number 1A, pp. 234-239, January 2013)
- Chris R. de Freitas, John D. McLean


Multi-periodic climate dynamics: spectral analysis of long-term instrumental and proxy temperature records (PDF)
(Climate of the Past, Volume 9, Number 1, pp. 447-452, February 2013)
- H.-J. Ludecke, A. Hempelmann, C. O. Weiss


On the Present Halting of Global Warming
(Climate, Volume 1, Issue 1, pp. 4-11, June 2013)
- Syun-Ichi Akasofu


A Dynamic, Coupled Thermal Reservoir Approach to Atmospheric Energy Transfer Part I: Concepts
(Energy & Environment, Volume 24, Number 3-4, pp. 319-340, June 2013)
- Roy Clark


A Dynamic, Coupled Thermal Reservoir Approach to Atmospheric Energy Transfer Part II: Applications
(Energy & Environment, Volume 24, Number 3-4, pp. 341-360, June 2013)
- Roy Clark


Climate Change and Carbon Dioxide: Geological Perspective
(Energy & Environment, Volume 24, Number 3-4, pp. 361-380, June 2013)
- Harry N. A. Priem


Meteosat Derived Planetary Temperature Trend 1982-2006
(Energy & Environment, Volume 24, Number 3-4, pp. 381-396, June 2013)
- Andries Rosema, Steven Foppes, Joost van der Woerd


Overcoming Chaotic Behavior of General Circulation Models (GCMs)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 24, Number 3-4, pp. 397-404, June 2013)
- S. Fred Singer


Inconsistency of Modeled and Observed Tropical Temperature Trends
(Energy & Environment, Volume 24, Number 3-4, pp. 405-414, June 2013)
- S. Fred Singer


Reconciling Observations of Global Temperature Change: 2013 (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 24, Number 3-4, pp. 415-420, June 2013)
- David H. Douglass, John R. Christy


Impact of Aerosols on Climate Sensitivity of CO2 as Implemented in Climate Models
(Energy & Environment, Volume 24, Number 3-4, pp. 421-430, June 2013)
- Ferdinand Engelbeen


Why Scientists are 'Sceptical' About the AGW Concept
(Energy & Environment, Volume 24, Number 3-4, pp. 551-560, June 2013)
- Arthur Rörsch, Peter A. Ziegler


Multi-Decadal Trends of Global Surface Temperature: A Broken Line with Alternating ~30 yr Linear Segments? (PDF)
(Atmospheric and Climate Sciences, Volume 3, Number 3, pp. 364-371, July 2013)
- Vincent Courtillot et al.


Encompassing tests of socioeconomic signals in surface climate data
(Climatic Change, Volume 120, Issue 1-2, pp. 95-107, September 2013)
- Ross McKitrick


Imprint of the Atlantic multi-decadal oscillation and Pacific decadal oscillation on southwestern US climate: past, present, and future
(Climate Dynamics, September 2013)
- Petr Chylek et al.


Reviewing the effect of CO2 and the sun on global climate
(Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, Volume 26, pp. 639–651, October 2013)
- Georgios A. Florides et al.


Why global warming went missing since the year 2000
(Nonlinear Engineering. Volume 2, Issue 3-4, pp. 129–135, October 2013)
- Albert Parker


Problem of the length of the current interglacial
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 53, Issue 7, pp. 876-881, December 2013)
- V. A. Dergachev, O. M. Raspopov


Influence of non-feedback variations of radiation on the determination of climate feedback
(Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 115, Issue 1-2, pp. 355-364, January 2014)
- Yong-Sang Choi, Heeje Cho, Chang-Hoi Ho, Richard S. Lindzen, Seon Ki Park, Xing Yu


Input selection and optimisation for monthly rainfall forecasting in Queensland, Australia, using artificial neural networks
(Atmospheric Research, Volume 138, pp. 166-178, March 2014)
- John Abbot, Jennifer Marohasy


New Systematic Errors in Anomalies of Global Mean Temperature Time-Series
(Energy & Environment, Volume 25, Number 1, pp. 105-122, February 2014)
- Michael Limburg


The Scientific Method in Contemporary (Climate) Research
(Energy & Environment, Volume 25, Number 1, pp. 137-146, February 2014)
- Peter Stallinga, Igor Khmelinskii


Tiny warming of residual anthropogenic CO2
(International Journal of Modern Physics B, Volume 28, Issue 13, pp. 1-20, May 2014)
- François Gervais


* Comment on "Tiny warming of residual anthropogenic CO2" (PDF)
(International Journal of Modern Physics B, Volume 28, June 2014)
- Nicola Scafetta


Quantifying the consensus on anthropogenic global warming in the literature: A re-analysis
(Energy Policy, Volume 73, pp. 701-705, October 2014)
- Richard S. J. Tol


* Quantifying the consensus on anthropogenic global warming in the literature: Rejoinder
(Energy Policy, Volume 73, pp. 709, October 2014)
- Richard S. J. Tol


Why models run hot: results from an irreducibly simple climate model
(Science Bulletin, Volume 60, Issue 1, pp. 122-135, January 2015)
- Christopher Monckton, Willie H. Soon, David R. Legates, William M. Briggs




Antarctica:

Active volcanism beneath the West Antarctic ice sheet and implications for ice-sheet stability
(Nature, Volume 361, Number 6412, pp. 526-529, February 1993)
- Donald D. Blankenship et al.


Aeromagnetic evidence for a volcanic caldera(?) Complex beneath the divide of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 25, Number 23, pp. 4385-4388, December 1998)
- John C. Behrendt et al.


Past and Future Grounding-Line Retreat of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet
(Science, Volume 286. Number 5438, pp. 280-283, October 1999)
- H. Conway et al.


First survey of Antarctic sub–ice shelf sediments reveals mid-Holocene ice shelf retreat
(Geology, Volume 29, Number 9, pp. 787-790, September 2001)
- Carol J. Pudsey et al.


Orbitally induced oscillations in the East Antarctic ice sheet at the Oligocene/Miocene boundary
(Nature, Volume 413, Number 6857, pp. 719-723, October 2001)
- Tim R. Naish et al.


Is the number of Antarctic icebergs really increasing? (PDF)
(Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, Volume 83, Issue 42, pp. 469-474, 2002)
- David G. Long, Jarom Ballantyn, Cheryl Bertoia


Antarctic climate cooling and terrestrial ecosystem response (PDF)
(Nature, Volume 415, Number 6871, pp. 517-520, January 2002)
- Peter T. Doran et al.


Ice-dynamical constraints on the existence and impact of subglacial volcanism on West Antarctic ice sheet stability
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Number 23, December 2006)
- Stefan W. Vogel et al.


Antarctic sea ice variability and trends, 1979–2006 (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 113, Issue C7, July 2007)
- D. J. Cavalieri, C. L. Parkinson


A doubling in snow accumulation in the western Antarctic Peninsula since 1850
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 35, Number 1, January 2008)
- Elizabeth R. Thomas et al.


A recent volcanic eruption beneath the West Antarctic ice sheet (PDF)
(Nature Geoscience, Volume 1, Number 2, pp. 122-125, January 2008)
- Hugh F. J. Corr, David G. Vaughan


An updated Antarctic melt record through 2009 and its linkages to high-latitude and tropical climate variability (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 36, Number 18, September 2009)
- Marco Tedesco et al.


Has the ozone hole contributed to increased Antarctic sea ice extent? (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 37, Number 18, September 2010)
- M. Sigmond, J. C. Fyfe


Do blue-ice moraines in the Heritage Range show the West Antarctic ice sheet survived the last interglacial?
(Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, Volumes 335–336, pp. 61-70, June 2012)
- Christopher J. Fogwill et al.


Improved methods for PCA-based reconstructions: case study using the Steig et al. (2009) Antarctic temperature reconstruction (PDF)
(Journal of Climate, Volume 24, Issue 8, pp. 2099-2115, April 2011)
- Ryan O’Donnell, Nicholas Lewis, Steve McIntyre, Jeff Condon


Insignificant change in Antarctic snowmelt volume since 1979 (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 39, Number 1, January 2012)
- P. Kuipers Munneke et al.


The aeromagnetic method as a tool to identify Cenozoic magmatism in the West Antarctic Rift System beneath the West Antarctic Ice Sheet — A review; Thiel subglacial volcano as possible source of the ash layer in the WAISCORE
(Tectonophysics, Volume 585, pp. 124-136, February 2013)
- John C. Behrendt


Seismic detection of an active subglacial magmatic complex in Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica
(Nature Geoscience, Volume 6, pp. 1031-1035, 2013)
- Amanda C. Lough et al.




Arctic:

Radiocarbon Age Determinations and Postglacial Emergence at Cape Storm, Southern Ellesmere Island, Arctic Canada
(Geografiska Annaler. Series A, Physical Geography, Volume 57, Number 1/2, pp. 1-71, 1975)
- Weston Blake, Jr.
)

Episodic Ice-Free Arctic Ocean in Pliocene and Pleistocene Time: Calcareous Nannofossil Evidence
(Science, Volume 210, number 4467, pp. 323-325, October 1980)
- Thomas R. Worsley, Yvonne Herman


Driftwood in Svalbard as an Indicator of Sea Ice Conditions
(Geografiska Annaler: Series A, Physical Geography, Volume 64, Number 1/2, pp. 81-94, 1982)
- Anders Haggblom


Holocene Sea-Ice Variations and Paleoenvironmental Change, Northernmost Ellesmere Island, N.W.T., Canada
(Arctic and Alpine Research, Volume 15, Number 1, pp. 1-17, February 1983)
- Thomas G. Stewart et al.


Absence of evidence for greenhouse warming over the Arctic Ocean in the past 40 years
(Nature, Volume 361, Number 6410, pp. 335-337, January 1993)
- Jonathan D. Kahl


Late Quaternary coccoliths at the North Pole: Evidence of ice-free conditions and rapid sedimentation in the central Arctic Ocean
(Geology, Volume 21, Issue 3, pp. 227, March 1993)
- Gunilla Gard


Arctic climate empirical diagnostics: a contribution to the climate change debate
(Idojaras, 999, Volume 103, Number 4, pp. 219-235, 1999)
- V. N. Adamenko, K. Ya. Kondratyev, C. A. Varotsos


Holocene Treeline History and Climate Change Across Northern Eurasia
(Quaternary Research, Volume 53, Issue 3, pp. 302-311, May 2000)
- Glen M. MacDonald et al.


Temporal and spatial variation of surface air temperature over the period of instrumental observations in the Arctic (PDF)
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 20, Issue 6, pp. 587-614, May 2000)
- Rajmund Przybylak


Arctic decadal and interdecadal variability (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 27, Issue 24, pp. 4097–4100, December 2000)
- Igor V. PolyakovMark A. Johnson


Arctic sea ice thickness remained constant during the 1990s (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 28, Number 6, pp. 1039-1042, March 2001)
- P. Winsor


Variability of Sea-Ice Extent in Baffin Bay over the Last Millennium
(Climatic Change, Volume 49, Issue 1-2, pp. 129-145, April 2001)
- Nancy S. Grumet et al.


Changes in seasonal and annual high-frequency air temperature variability in the Arctic from 1951 to 1990 (PDF)
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 22, Issue 9, pp. 1017–1032, July 2002)
- Rajmund Przybylak


Has Arctic Sea Ice Rapidly Thinned? (PDF)
(Journal of Climate, Volume 15, Issue 13, pp. 1691-1701, July 2002)
- Greg Holloway et al.


Observationally based assessment of polar amplification of global warming (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 29, Number 18, pp. 25-1, September 2002)
- Igor V. Polyakov et al.


Response of Sea Ice to the Arctic Oscillation
(Journal of Climate, Volume 15, Issue 18, pp. 2648-2663, September 2002)
- Ignatius G. Rigor et al.


Accounts from 19th-century Canadian Arctic Explorers' Logs Reflect Present Climate Conditions
(Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, Volume 84, Issue 40, pp. 410-412, 2003)
- James E. Overland et al.


Variability and Trends of Air Temperature and Pressure in the Maritime Arctic, 1875-2000 (PDF)
(Journal of Climate, Volume 16, Issue 12, pp. 2067-2077, June 2003)
- Igor V. Polyakov et al.


Holocene sea-ice variations in Greenland: onshore evidence
(The Holocene, Volume 14, Number 4, pp. 607-613, May 2004)
- Ole Bennike


Holocene thermal maximum in the western Arctic (0–180°W)
(Quaternary Science Reviews, Volume 23, Issues 5-6, pp. 529-560, March 2004)
- D. S. Kaufman et al.


Variations in the age of Arctic sea-ice and summer sea-ice extent (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Number 9, May 2004)
- Ignatius G. Rigor et al.


Actual and insolation-weighted Northern Hemisphere snow cover and sea-ice between 1973–2002
(Climate Dynamics, Volume 22, Issue 6-7, pp. 591-595, June 2004)
- Roger A. Pielke Sr. et al.


The Early Twentieth-Century Warming in the Arctic—A Possible Mechanism
(Journal of Climate, Volume 17, Issue 20, pp. 4045-4057, October 2004)
- Lennart Bengtsson et al.


Variability of the Intermediate Atlantic Water of the Arctic Ocean over the Last 100 Years (PDF)
(Journal of Climate, Voume 17, Issue 23, pp. 4485-4497, December 2004)
- Igor V. Polyakov et al.


Variable solar irradiance as a plausible agent for multidecadal variations in the Arctic-wide surface air temperature record of the past 130 years (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Number 16, August 2005)
- Willie H. Soon


The influence of the lunar nodal cycle on Arctic climate (PDF)
(Journal of Marine Science, Volume 63, Issue 3, pp. 401-420, 2006)
- Harald Yndestad


Historical variability of sea ice edge position in the Nordic Seas
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 111, Issue C1, January 2006)
- Dmitry V. Divine et al.


The regime shift of the 1920s and 1930s in the North Atlantic
(Progress in Oceanography, Volume 68, Issues 2-4, pp. 134-151, February-March 2006)
- Kenneth F. Drinkwater


Holocene fluctuations in Arctic sea-ice cover: dinocyst-based reconstructions for the eastern Chukchi Sea (PDF)
(Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, Volume 45, Number 11, pp. 1377-1397, November 2008)
- J. L. McKay et al.


Summer retreat of Arctic sea ice: Role of summer winds (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 35, Number 24, December 2008)
- Masayo Ogi et al.


Is the Dipole Anomaly a major driver to record lows in Arctic summer sea ice extent? (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 36, Issue 5, March 2009)
- Jia Wang et al.


Solar Arctic-Mediated Climate Variation on Multidecadal to Centennial Timescales: Empirical Evidence, Mechanistic Explanation, and Testable Consequences (PDF)
(Physical Geography, Volume 30, Number 2, March-April 2009)
- Willie H. Soon


Arctic air temperature change amplification and the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 36, Number 14, July 2009)
- Petr Chylek et al.


Data Analysis of Recent Warming Pattern in the Arctic (PDF)
(SOLA, Volume 6A, pp. 1-4, 2010)
- Masahiro Ohashi, H. L. Tanaka


Influence of winter and summer surface wind anomalies on summer Arctic sea ice extent (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 37, Number 7, April 2010)
- Masayo Ogi


Recovery mechanisms of Arctic summer sea ice (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 38, Number 2, January 2011)
- S. Tietsche et al.


Arctic Environment by the Middle of This Century (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 22, Number 3, pp. 207-218, April 2011)
- Nils-Axel Morner


A 10,000-Year Record of Arctic Ocean Sea-Ice Variability—View from the Beach
(Science, Volume 333, Number 6043, pp. 747-750, August 2011)
- Svend Funder et al.


Dramatic interannual changes of perennial Arctic sea ice linked to abnormal summer storm activity
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 116, Issue D15, August 2011)
- James A. Screen et al.


Recent wind driven high sea ice area export in the Fram Strait contributes to Arctic sea ice decline (PDF)
(The Cryosphere, Volume 5, Number 4, pp. 821-829, October 2011)
- L. H. Smedsrud et al.


Holocene dynamics of the Arctic's largest ice shelf (PDF)
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 108, Number 47, pp. 18899-18904, November 2011)
- Dermot Antoniades et al.


Arctic Warming is not Greenhouse Warming (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 22, Number 8, pp. 1069-1084, December 2011)
- Arno Arrak


The role of summer surface wind anomalies in the summer Arctic sea ice extent in 2010 and 2011
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 39, Issue 9, May 2012)
- Masayo Ogi, John M. Wallace


On the statistical significance of surface air temperature trends in the Eurasian Arctic region
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 39, Issue 23, December 2012)
- C. Franzke


Anthropogenic CO2 warming challenged by 60-year cycle (PDF)
(Earth-Science Reviews, Volume 155, pp. 129–135, April 2016)
- François Gervais




Climate Sensitivity:

The short-term influence of various concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide on the temperature profile in the boundary layer
(Pure and Applied Geophysics, Volume 113, Issue 1, pp. 331-353, 1975)
- Wilford G. Zdunkowski, Jan Paegle, Falko K. Fye


+0.5 °C

Questions Concerning the Possible Influence of Anthropogenic CO2 on Atmospheric Temperature
(Journal of Applied Meteorology, Volume 18, Issue 6, pp. 822-825, June 1979)
- Reginald E. Newell, Thomas G. Dopplick


* Reply to Robert G. Watts' "Discussion of 'Questions Concerning the Possible Influence of Anthropogenic CO2 on Atmospheric Temperature'"
(Journal of Applied Meteorology, Volume 20, Issue 1, pp. 114–117, January 1981)
- Reginald E. Newell, Thomas G. Dopplick


+0.3 °C

CO2-induced global warming: a skeptic's view of potential climate change (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 10, Number 1, pp. 69–82, April 1998)
- Sherwood B. Idso


+0.4 °C

Revised 21st century temperature projections (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 23, Number 1, pp. 1–9, December 2002)
- Patrick J. Michaels, Paul C. Knappenberger, Oliver W. Frauenfeld, Robert E. Davis


+1.9 °C

Heat capacity, time constant, and sensitivity of Earth's climate system (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 112, Issue D24, November 2007)
- Stephen E. Schwartz


* Reply to comments by G. Foster et al., R. Knutti et al., and N. Scafetta on "Heat capacity, time constant, and sensitivity of Earth's climate system" (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 113, Issue D15, August 2008)
- Stephen E. Schwartz


+1.9 °C

Aerosol radiative forcing and climate sensitivity deduced from the Last Glacial Maximum to Holocene transition (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 35, Issue 4, February 2008)
- Petr Chylek, Ulrike Lohmann


* Reply to comment by Andrey Ganopolski and Thomas Schneider von Deimling on “Aerosol radiative forcing and climate sensitivity deduced from the Last Glacial Maximum to Holocene transition” (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 35, Issue 23, December 2008)
- Petr Chylek, Ulrike Lohmann


+1.3-2.3 °C

Limits on CO2 Climate Forcing from Recent Temperature Data of Earth (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 1-2, pp. 177-189, January 2009)
- David H. Douglass, John R. Christy


+1.1 °C

On the Observational Determination of Climate Sensitivity and Its Implications (PDF)
(Asia-Pacific Journal of Atmospheric Sciences, Volume 47, Number 4, pp. 377-390, August 2011)
- Richard S. Lindzen, Yong-Sang Choi


+0.7 °C

Climate Sensitivity Estimated from Temperature Reconstructions of the Last Glacial Maximum (PDF)
(Science, Volume 334, Number 6061, pp. 1385-1388, November 2011)
- Andreas Schmittner et al.


+1.7-2.6 °C

Probabilistic Estimates of Transient Climate Sensitivity Subject to Uncertainty in Forcing and Natural Variability (PDF)
(Journal of Climate, Volume 24, Issue 21, pp. 5521-5537, Novmeber 2011)
- Lauren E. Padilla, Geoffrey K. Vallis, Clarence W. Rowley


+1.6 °C

Improved constraints on 21st-century warming derived using 160 years of temperature observations
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 39, Number 1, January 2012)
- N. P. Gillett et al.


+1.3-1.8 °C

Bayesian estimation of climate sensitivity based on a simple climate model fitted to observations of hemispheric temperatures and global ocean heat content (PDF)
(Environmetrics, Volume 23, Issue 3, pp. 253–271, May 2012)
- Magne Aldrin et. al.


+1.9 °C

Observational estimate of climate sensitivity from changes in the rate of ocean heat uptake and comparison to CMIP5 models
(Climate Dynamics, April 2013)
- Troy Masters


+1.98 °C

A fractal climate response function can simulate global average temperature trends of the modern era and the past millennium
(Climate Dynamics, Volume 40, Issue 11-12,pp. 2651-2670, June 2013)
- J. H. van Hateren


+1.7-2.3 °C

An objective Bayesian, improved approach for applying optimal fingerprint techniques to estimate climate sensitivity
(Journal of Climate, Volume 26, Issue 19, pp. 7414-7429, October 2013)
- Nicholas Lewis


+1.6 °C

The Potency of Carbon Dioxide (CO2) as a Greenhouse Gas
(Development in Earth Science, Volume 2, pp. 20-30, 2014)
- Antero Ollila


+0.6 °C

The role of ENSO in global ocean temperature changes during 1955–2011 simulated with a 1D climate model
(Asia-Pacific Journal of Atmospheric Sciences, Volume 50, Issue 2, pp. 229-237, February 2014)
- Roy W. Spencer, William D. Braswell


+1.3 °C

A minimal model for estimating climate sensitivity
(Ecological Modelling, Volume 276, pp. 80-84, March 2014)
- Craig Loehle


+1.99 °C



Clouds:

A two-parameter approximation in cloudiness variability studies
(Atmospheric Research, Volume 27, Issue 4, pp. 231–252, February 1992)
- Olavi Karner et al.


Does the Earth Have an Adaptive Infrared Iris? (PDF)
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 82, Issue 3, pp. 417-432, March 2001)
- Richard S. Lindzen, Ming-Dah Chou, Arthur Y. Hou


* Reply to Comment on "Does the Earth Have an Adaptive Infrared Iris?" (PDF)
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 83, Issue 4, pp. 598-600, April, 2002)
- Richard S. Lindzen, Ming-Dah Chou, Arthur Y. Hou


* Reply to: "Tropical cirrus and water vapor: an effective Earth infrared iris feedback?" (PDF)
(Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, Volume 2, Issue 2, pp. 99-101, May 2002)
- Ming-Dah Chou, Richard S. Lindzen, Arthur Y. Hou


* Comment on "No Evidence for Iris" (PDF)
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 83, Issue 9, pp. 1345–1349, September 2002)
- Richard S. Lindzen, Ming-Dah Chou, Arthur Y. Hou


* Comments on "The Iris Hypothesis: A Negative or Positive Cloud Feedback?" (PDF)
(Journal of Climate, Volume 15, Issue 18, pp. 2713-2715, September 2002)
- Ming-Dah Chou, Richard S. Lindzen, Arthur Y. Hou


* Comments on "Examination of the Decadal Tropical Mean ERBS Nonscanner Radiation Data for the Iris Hypothesis"
(Journal of Climate, Volume 18, Issue 12, pp. 2123-2127, June 2005)
- Ming-Dah Chou, Richard S. Lindzen


Radiative effect of cirrus with different optical properties over the tropics in MODIS and CERES observations
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Number 21, November 2006)
- Yong-Sang Choi, Chang-Hoi Ho


Cloud and radiation budget changes associated with tropical intraseasonal oscillations (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 34, Number 15, August 2007)
- Roy W. Spencer, William D. Braswell, John R. Christy, Justin Hnilo


Observed variations in convective precipitation fraction and stratiform area with sea surface temperature (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 113, Issue D16, August 2008)
- Roberto Rondanelli, Richard S. Lindzen


Validation of the cloud property retrievals from the MTSAT-1R imagery using MODIS observations
(International Journal of Remote Sensing, Volume 30, Issue 22, pp. 5935-5958, October 2009)
- Yong-Sang Choi, Chang-Hoi Ho


Can thin cirrus clouds in the tropics provide a solution to the faint young Sun paradox? (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 115, Issue D2, January 2010)
- Roberto Rondanelli, Richard S. Lindzen


Satellite retrievals of (quasi-)spherical particles at cold temperatures (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 37, Number 5, March 2010)
- Yong-Sang Choi, Chang-Hoi Ho, Jinwon Kim, Richard S. Lindzen


Space observations of cold-cloud phase change (PDF)
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 107, Issue 25, pp. 11211-11216, June 2010)
- Yong-Sang Choi, Richard S. Lindzen, Chang-Hoi Ho, Jinwon Kim


The thunderstorm thermostat hypothesis: How clouds and thunderstorms control the Earth's temperature (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 4, pp. 201-216, August 2010)
- Willis Eschenbach


Observational diagnosis of cloud phase in the winter Antarctic atmosphere for parameterizations in climate models
(Advances in Atmospheric Sciences, Volume 27, Number 6, pp. 1233-1245, November 2010)
- Yong-Sang Choi, Chang-Hoi Ho, Sang-Woo Kim, Richard S. Lindzen


Global cloud height fluctuations measured by MISR on Terra from 2000 to 2010
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 39, Number 3, February 2012)
- Roger Davies, Matthew Molloy


Significant decreasing cloud cover during 1954–2005 due to more clear-sky days and less overcast days in China and its relation to aerosol (PDF)
(Annales Geophysicae, Volume 30, Number 3, pp. 573-582, March 2012)
- X. Xia


Total cloud cover from satellite observations and climate models (PDF)
(Atmospheric Research, Volume 107, pp. 161-170, April 2012)
- P. Probst et al.


Earth's Energy Balance for Clear, Cloudy and All-Sky Conditions
(Development in Earth Science, Volume 1, Issue 1, pp. 1-10, September 2013)
- Antero Ollila


Dynamics between Clear, Cloudy, and All-Sky Conditions: Cloud Forcing Effects (PDF)
(Journal of Chemical, Biological and Physical Sciences, Volume 4, Number 1, pp. 557-575, November 2013 - January 2014)
- Antero Ollila


Influence of Relative Humidity and Clouds on the Global Mean Surface Temperature
(Energy & Environment, Volume 25, Number 2, pp. 389-400, April 2014)
- Jyrki Kauppinen, Jorma Heinonen, Pekka Malmi




Coral Reefs:

Coral reef environmental science: truth versus the Cassandra syndrome
(Coral Reefs, Volume 11, Number 4, pp. 183-186, December 1992)
- Richard W. Grigg


Reef corals bleach to survive change
(Nature, Volume 411, Number 6839, pp. 765-766, June 2001)
- Andrew C. Baker


Resilience to large-scale disturbance in coral and fish assemblages on the Great Barrier Reef
(Ecology, Volume 85, Issue 7, pp. 1892-1905, July 2004)
- A. Halford et al.


Coral reef calcification and climate change: The effect of ocean warming
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Number 22, November 2004)
- Ben I. McNeil et al.


* Reply to comment by Kleypas et al. on "Coral reef calcification and climate change: The effect of ocean warming" (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Number 8, April 2005)
- Ben I. McNeil et al.


A critique of a method to determine long-term decline of coral reef ecosystems
(Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 6, pp. 783-796, November 2007)
- Peter V. Ridd


Bikini Atoll coral biodiversity resilience five decades after nuclear testing (PDF)
(Marine Pollution Bulletin, Volume 56, Issue 3, pp. 503-515, March 2008)
- Zoe T. Richards et al.


Major bleaching events can lead to increased thermal tolerance in corals
(Marine Biology, Volume 155, Number 2, pp. 173-182, August 2008)
- J. A. Maynard et al.


Revisiting the Cassandra syndrome; the changing climate of coral reef research
(Coral Reefs, Volume 27, Number 4, pp. 745-749, December 2008)
- J. A. Maynard et al.


Scleractinian coral population size structures and growth rates indicate coral resilience on the fringing reefs of North Jamaica
Marine Environmental Research, Volume 67, Issues 4-5, pp. 189-198, May-June 2009)
- M. J. C. Crabbe


Recurrent disturbances, recovery trajectories, and resilience of coral assemblages on a South Central Pacific reef
(Coral Reefs, Volume 28, Number 3, pp. 775-780, September 2009)
- M. Adjeroud et al.


Stability in temperate reef communities over a decadal time scale despite concurrent ocean warming
(Global Change Biology, Volume 16, Issue 1, pp. 122–134, January 2010)
- R. D. Stuart-Smith et al.


Coral resilience to ocean acidification and global warming through pH up-regulation
(Nature Climate Change, Volume 2, Number 8, pp. 623-627, August 2012)
- Malcolm McCulloch et al.


Changes in coral microbial communities in response to a natural pH gradient
(The ISME Journal, Volume 6, Number 9, pp. 1775-1785 September 2012)
- Dalit Meron et al.




Deaths:

U.S. Trends in Crude Death Rates Due to Extreme Heat and Cold Ascribed to Weather, 1979-97
(Technology, Volume 7, Supplement 1, pp. 165-173, 2000)
- Indur M. Goklany, Sorin R. Straja


Heat related mortality in warm and cold regions of Europe: observational study
(British Medical Journal, Volume 321, Number 7262, pp. 670-673, September 2000)
- W. R. Keatinge et al.


Decadal changes in heat-related human mortality in the eastern United States (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 22, Number 2, pp. 175-184. September 2002)
- Robert E. Davis, Paul C. Knappenberger, Wendy M. Novicoff, Patrick J. Michaels


Cold—an underrated risk factor for health
(Environmental Research, Volume 92, Issue 1, pp. 8-13, May 2003)
- James B. Mercer


Decadal changes in summer mortality in U.S. cities
(International Journal of Biometeorology, Volume 47, Number 3, pp. 166-175, May 2003)
- Robert E. Davis, Paul C. Knappenberger, Wendy M. Novicoff, Patrick J. Michaels


Changing Heat-Related Mortality in the United States (PDF)
(Environmental Health Perspectives, Volume 111, Number 14, pp. 1712-1718, November 2003)
- Robert E. Davis, Paul C. Knappenberger, Patrick J. Michaels, Wendy M. Novicoff


Seasonality of climate–human mortality relationships in US cities and impacts of climate change (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 26, Number 1, pp. 61-76, April 2004)
- Robert E. Davis, Paul C. Knappenberger, Patrick J. Michaels, Wendy M. Novicoff


Temperature-related mortality in France, a comparison between regions with different climates from the perspective of global warming
(International Journal of Biometeorology, Volume 51, Number 2, pp. 145-153, November 2006)
- Mohamed Laaidi, Karine Laaidi, Jean-Pierre Besancenot


Global Health Threats: Global Warming in Perspective (PDF)
(Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons, Volume 14, Number 3, pp. 69-75, Fall 2009)
- Indur M. Goklany


Extreme Weather Events, Mortality, and Migration (PDF)
(The Review of Economics and Statistics, Volume 91, Number 4, pp. 659-681, November 2009)
- Olivier Deschenes, Enrico Moretti


Deaths and Death Rates from Extreme Weather Events: 1900-2008 (PDF)
(Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons, Volume 14, Number 4, pp. 102-109, Winter 2009)
- Indur M. Goklany


Direct Health Effects of Climate Change: an Overview (PDF)
(Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons, Volume 15, Number 2, pp. 38-41, Summer 2010)
- Howard Maccabee


The health of Arctic populations: Does cold matter?
(American Journal of Human Biology, Volume 22, Issue 1, pp. 129–133, January/February 2010)
- T. Kue Young, Tiina M. Mäkinen




Disease:

From Shakespeare to Defoe: Malaria in England in the Little Ice Age
(Emerging Infectious Diseases, Volume 6, Number 1, January–February 2000)
- Paul Reiter


Climate Change and Mosquito-Borne Disease
(Environmental Health Perspectives, Volume 109, Supplement 1, March 2001)
- Paul Reiter


Climate variability and change in the United States: potential impacts on vector- and rodent-borne diseases
(Environmental Health Perspectives, Volume 109, Supplement 2, pp. 223–233, May 2001)
- Duane J. Gubler, Paul Reiter, Kristie L. Ebi, Wendy Yap, Roger Nasci, Jonathan A. Patz


Hot topic or hot air? Climate change and malaria resurgence in East African highlands (PDF)
(Trends in Parasitology, Volume 18, Issue 12, pp. 530-534, December 2002)
- Simon I. Hay et al.


Texas Lifestyle Limits Transmission of Dengue Virus (PDF)
(Emerging Infectious Diseases, Volume 9, Number 1, pp. 86-89, January 2003)
- Paul Reiter et al.


Evidence that climate change has caused ‘emergence’ of tick-borne diseases in Europe?
(International Journal of Medical Microbiology Supplements, Volume 293, Supplement 37, pp. 5-15, April 2004)
- Sarah E. Randolph


Global warming and malaria: a call for accuracy
(The Lancet Infectious Diseases, Volume 4, Issue 6, pp. 323-324, June 2004)
- Paul Reiter, C. Thomas, P. Atkinson, S. Hay, S. Randolph, D. Rogers, G. Shanks, R. Snow, A. Spielman


Global warming and malaria: knowing the horse before hitching the cart
(Malaria Journal, Volume 7, Supplement 1, December 2008)
- Paul Reiter


Impact of global warming on viral diseases: what is the evidence?
(Current Opinion in Biotechnology, Volume 19, Issue 6, pp. 652-660, December 2008)
- Roland Zell et al.


Global spread of epidemic dengue: the influence of environmental change
(Future Virology, Volume 4, Number 6, pp. 571-580, November 2009)
- Eng-Eong Ooi​‌, Duane J Gubler​‌


Is Global Warming likely to cause an increased incidence of Malaria?
(Libyan Journal Medicine, Volume 4, Number 1, pp. 18-22, March 2009)
- S. A. Nabi, S. S. Qader


Climate change and the global malaria recession (PDF)
(Nature, Volume 465, Number 7296, pp. 342-345, May 2010)
- Peter W. Gething et al.




Ecological:

Possible climatic impact of tropical deforestation
(Nature, Volume 258, Number 5537, pp. 697-698, December 1975)
- Gerald L. Potter, Hugh W. Ellsaesser, Michael C. MacCracken, Frederick M. Luther


Increasing atmospheric CO2: effects on crop yield, water use and climate
(Agricultural Water Management, Volume 7, Issues 1-3, pp. 55-72, September 1983)
- Bruce A. Kimball, Sherwood B. Idso


Carbon Dioxide and Agricultural Yield: An Assemblage and Analysis of 430 Prior Observations
(Agronomy Journal, Volume 75, Number 5, pp. 779-788, September-October 1983)
- Bruce A. Kimball


Rising atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations may increase streamflow
(Nature, Volume 312, Number 5989, pp. 51-53, November 1984)
- Sherwood B. Idso et al.


Atmospheric CO2 Enrichment of Water Hyacinths: Effects on Transpiration and Water Use Efficiency
(Water Resources Research, Volume 21, Issue 11, pp. 1787-1790, November 1985)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball, Michael G. Anderson


Growth Response of a Succulent Plant, Agave vilmoriniana, to Elevated CO2
(Plant Physiology, Volume 80, Issue 3, pp. 796-797, March 1986)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball, Michael G. Anderson, Stan R. Szarek


Review: CO2 enrichment in greenhouses. Crop responses
(Scientia Horticulturae, Volume 33, Issues 1-2, pp. 1-25, August 1987)
- Leiv M. Mortensen


Effects of atmospheric CO2 enrichment on plant growth: the interactive role of air temperature
(Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, Volume 20, Issue 1, pp. 1-10, November 1987)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball, M. G. Anderson, J. R. Mauney


Interactive effects of CO2 and environment on photosynthesis of Azolla
(Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, Volume 42, Issues 2-3, pp. 209-217, March 1988)
- Stephen G. Allen, Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball, Michael G. Anderson


Three Phases of Plant Response to Atmospheric CO2 Enrichment
(Plant Physiology, Volume 87, Number 1, pp. 5-7, May 1988)
- Sherwood B. Idso


Effects of atmospheric CO2 enrichment on root: Shoot ratios of carrot, radish, cotton and soybean
(Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, Volume 21, Issues 3-4, pp. 293-299, October 1988)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball, J. R. Mauney


Carbon Dioxide, Soil Moisture, and Future Crop Production
(Soil Science, Volume 147, Issue 4, pp. 305-307, April 1989)
- Sherwood B. Idso


Growth response of carrot and radish to atmospheric CO2 enrichment
(Environmental and Experimental Botany, Volume 29, Issue 2, pp. 135-139, April 1989)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball


Atmospheric CO2 enrichment enhances survival of Azolla at high temperatures
(Environmental and Experimental Botany, Volume 29, Issue 3, pp. 337-341, July 1989)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Stephen G. Allen, M. G. Anderson, Bruce A. Kimball


Interactive effects of CO2 and environment on net photosynthesis of Water-Lily
(Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, Volume 30, Issues 1-2, pp. 81-88, January 1990)
- Stephen G. Allen, Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball


Growth response of water lily to atmospheric CO2 enrichment
(Aquatic Botany, Volume 37, Issue 1, pp. 87-92, June 1990)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Stephen G. Allen, Bruce A. Kimball


Net photosynthesis of sour orange trees maintained in atmospheres of ambient and elevated CO2 concentration
(Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, Volume 54, Issue 1, pp. 95-101, March 1991)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball, Stephen G. Allen


CO2 enrichment of sour orange trees: 2.5 years into a long-term experiment
(Plant, Cell & Environment, Volume 14, Issue 3, pp. 351-353, April 1991)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball, Stephen G. Allen


Effects of two and a half years of atmospheric CO2 enrichment on the root density distribution of three-year-old sour orange trees
(Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, Volume 55, Issues 3-4, pp. 345-349, June 1991)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball


Seasonal fine-root biomass development of sour orange trees grown in atmospheres of ambient and elevated CO2 concentration
(Plant, Cell & Environment, Volume 15, Issue 3, pp. 337-341, April 1992)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball


Effects of Atmospheric CO2 Enrichment on Photosynthesis, Respiration, and Growth of Sour Orange Trees
(Plant Physiology, Volume 99, Number 1, pp. 341-343, May 1992)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball


Aboveground inventory of sour orange trees exposed to different atmospheric CO2 concentrations for 3 full years
(Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, Volume 60, Issues 1-2, pp. 145-151, August 1992)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball


Effects of increasing atmospheric CO2 on vegetation
(Plant Ecology, Volume 104-105, Number 1, pp. 65-75, January 1993)
- Bruce A. Kimball, J. R. Mauney, F. S. Nakayama, Sherwood B. Idso


Effects of atmospheric CO2 enrichment on net photosynthesis and dark respiration rates of three Australian tree species
(Journal of Plant Physiology, Volume 141, Number 2, pp. 166-171, February 1993)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball


Tree Growth in Carbon Dioxide Enriched Air and Its Implications for Global Carbon Cycling and Maximum Levels of Atmospheric CO2
(Global Biogeochemical Cycles, Volume 7, Issue 3, pp. 537-556, September 1993)
- Bruce A. Kimball, Sherwood B. Idso


Effects of Atmospheric CO2 Enrichment on Regrowth of Sour Orange Trees (Citrus aurantium; Rutaceae) after Coppicing
(American Journal of Botany, Volume 81, Number 7, pp. 843-846, July 1994)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball


Net photosynthesis as a function of carbon dioxide concentration in pine trees grown at ambient and elevated CO2
(Environmental and Experimental Botany, Volume 34, Issue 3, pp. 337-341, July 1994)
- R. L. Garcia, Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball


Plant responses to atmospheric CO2 enrichment in the face of environmental constraints: a review of the past 10 years' research
(Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, Volume 69, Issues 3-4, pp. 153-203, July 1994)
- Keith E. Idso, Sherwood B. Idso


Changes in net photosynthesis and growth of Pinus eldarica seedlings in response to atmospheric CO2 enrichment
(Plant, Cell & Environment, Volume 17, Issue 8, pp. 971-978, August 1994)
- R. L. Garcia et al.


Effect of free-air CO2 enrichment on the chlorophyll content of cotton leaves
(Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, Volume 70, Issues 1-4, pp. 163-169, September 1994)
- P. J. Pinter Jr et al.


Effects of atmospheric CO2 enrichment on biomass accumulation and distribution in Eldarica pine trees
(Journal of Experimental Botany, Volume 45, Number 280, pp. 1669-1672, November 1994)
- Sherwood B. Idso


Forest response to climate change
(Journal of Forestry, Volume 94, Issue 9, pp. 13-15, September 1996)
- Craig Loehle


Model-based assessments of climate change effects on forests: a critical review
(Ecological Modelling, Volume 90, Issue 1, pp. 1-31, September 1996)
- Craig Loehle, David LeBlanc


Effects of atmospheric CO2 enrichment on chlorophyll and nitrogen concentrations of sour orange tree leaves
(Environmental and Experimental Botany, Volume 36, Issue 3, pp. 323-331, October 1996)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball, Donald L. Hendrix


Elevated CO2 mitigates chilling-induced water stress and photosynthetic reduction during chilling
(Plant, Cell & Environment, Volume 20, Issue 5, pp. 625-632, November 1996)
- S. R. Boese


Effects of long-term atmospheric CO2 enrichment on the mineral concentration of Citrus aurantium leaves
(New Phytologist, Volume 135, Issue 3, pp. 439-444, March 1997)
- Josep Penuelas, Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball, Angela Ribas


Increased plant growth in the northern high latitudes from 1981 to 1991
(Nature, Volume 386, Number 6626, pp. 698-702, April 1997)
- R. B. Myneni


Height growth rate tradeoffs determine northern and southern range limits for trees
(Journal of Biogeography, Volume 25, Number 4, pp. 735-742, July 1998)
- Philip Stott, Craig Loehle


The relationship between near-surface air temperature over land and the annual amplitude of the atmosphere’s seasonal CO2 cycle
(Environmental and Experimental Botany, Volume 41, Issue 1, pp. 31–37, February 1999)
- Craig D Idso, Sherwood B Idso, Robert C Balling Jr


Net Primary Production of a Forest Ecosystem with Experimental CO2 Enrichment
(Science, Volume 284, Number 5417, pp. 1177-1179, May 1999)
- Evan H. DeLucia et al.


Annual fluxes of carbon from deforestation and regrowth in the Brazilian Amazon (PDF)
(Nature, Volume 403, Number 6767, pp. 301-304, January 2000)
- R. A. Houghton et al.


Effects of atmospheric CO2 enrichment on the growth and development of Hymenocallis littoralis (Amaryllidaceae) and the concentrations of several antineoplastic and antiviral constituents of its bulbs
(American Journal of Botany, Volume 87, Number 6, pp. 769-773, June 2000)
- Sherwood B. Idso et al.


Forest ecotone response to climate change: sensitivity to temperature response functional forms (PDF)
(Canadian Journal of Forest Research, Volume 30, Number 10, pp. 1632-1645, October 2000)
- Craig Loehle


Effects of atmospheric CO2 enrichment on plant constituents related to animal and human health
(Environmental and Experimental Botany, Volume 45, Issue 2, pp. 179-199, April 2001)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Keith D. Idso


Rising CO2 Levels and the Fecundity of Forest Trees
(Science, Volume 292, Issue 5514, pp. 95-98, April 2001)
- Shannon L. LaDeau, James S. Clark


Earth's rising atmospheric CO2 concentration: Impacts on the biosphere
(Energy & Environment, Volume 12, Number 4, pp. 287-310, July 2001)
- Craig D. Idso


The effect of elevated atmospheric CO2 on the vitamin C concentration of (sour) orange juice
(Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, Volume 90, Issue 1, pp. 1-7, June 2002)
- Sherwood B. Idso et al.


Climate-Driven Increases in Global Terrestrial Net Primary Production from 1982 to 1999 (PDF)
(Science, Volume 300, Number 5625, pp. 1560-1563, June 2003)
- Ramakrishna R. Nemani et al.


Free-air CO2 enrichment effects on the energy balance and evapotranspiration of sorghum (PDF)
(Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, Volume 124, Issues 1–2, pp. 63-79, July 2004)
- J. M. Triggs et al.


Forest response to elevated CO2 is conserved across a broad range of productivity (PDF)
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 102, Number 50, pp. 18052-18056, December 2005)
- Richard J. Norby et al.


Amazon rainforests green-up with sunlight in dry season (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Number 6, March 2006)
- Alfredo R. Huete et al.


Effect of natural atmospheric CO2 fertilization suggested by open-grown white spruce in a dry environment
(Global Change Biology, Volume 12, Issue 3, pp. 601–610, March 2006)
- G. Geoff Wang et al.


Interaction of ice storms and management practices on current carbon sequestration in forests with potential mitigation under future CO2 atmosphere
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 111, Issue D15, August 2006)
- Heather R. McCarthy et al.


Elevated CO2 alleviates the impact of drought on barley improving water status by lowering stomatal conductance and delaying its effects on photosynthesis
(Environmental and Experimental Botany, Volume 59, Issue 3, pp. 252-263, April 2007)
- Anabel Robredo et al.


Amazon Forests Green-Up During 2005 Drought (PDF)
(Science, Volume 318, Number 5850, pp. 612, October 2007)
- Scott R. Saleska et al.


Seventeen years of carbon dioxide enrichment of sour orange trees: final results
(Global Change Biology, Volume 13, Issue 10, pp. 2171-2183, October 2007)
- Bruce A. Kimball, Sherwood B. Idso, Stephanie Johnson, Matthias C. Rillig


Difficulties in tracking the long-term global trend in tropical forest area
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 105, Number 2, pp. 818-823, January 2008)
- Alan Grainger


Opening the climate envelope reveals no macroscale associations with climate in European birds (PDF)
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 105, Number 39, pp. 14908-14912, September 2008)
- Colin M. Beale et al.


Capacity of Old Trees to Respond to Environmental Change
(Journal of Integrative Plant Biology, Volume 50, Issue 11, pp. 1355–1364, November 2008)
- Nathan G. Phillips


Increased plant biomass in a High Arctic heath community from 1981 to 2008
(Ecology, Volume 90, Number 10, pp. 2657-2663, October 2009)
- J. M. G. Hudson, G. H. R. Henry


Greater seed production in elevated CO2 is not accompanied by reduced seed quality in Pinus taeda L. (PDF)
(Global Change Biology, Volume 16, Issue 3, pp. 1046–1056, March 2010)
- Danielle A. Way et al.


Climate–growth relationships for largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides) across three southeastern USA states (PDF)
(Ecology of Freshwater Fish, Volume 18, Issue 4, pp. 620-628, August 2009)
- Andrew L. Rypel


Do nonlinear temperature effects indicate severe damages to US crop yields under climate change?
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 106, Issue 43, pp. E120-E120, October 2009)
- B. G. Meerburg et al.


Intercomparison, interpretation, and assessment of spring phenology in North America estimated from remote sensing for 1982-2006 (PDF)
(Global Change Biology, Volume 15, Number 10, pp. 2335-2359, October 2009)
- Michael A. White et al.


A weak upward elevational shift in the distributions of breeding birds in the Italian Alps
(Journal of Biogeography, Volume 37, Issue 1, pp. 57–67, January 2010)
- Simon Popy et al.


Atmospheric CO2 concentration influences the contributions of osmolyte accumulation and cell wall elasticity to salt tolerance in barley cultivars
(Journal of Plant Physiology, Volume 167, Issue 1, pp. 15–22, January 2010)
- Usue Perez-Lopez et al.


Effect of elevated CO2 on vegetative and reproductive growth characteristics of the CAM plants Hylocereus undatus and Selenicereus megalanthus
(Scientia Horticulturae, Volume 123, Issue 4, pp. 531–536, February 2010)
- Israel Weiss et al.


Implications of future climate and atmospheric CO2 content for regional biogeochemistry, biogeography and ecosystem services across East Africa
(Global Change Biology, Volume 16, Issue 2, pp. 617–640, February 2010)
- Ruth M. Doherty et al.


Evidence for a recent increase in forest growth (PDF)
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 107, Number 8, pp. 3611-3615, February 2010)
- Sean M. McMahon et al.


Effects of climate-driven primary production change on marine food webs: implications for fisheries and conservation
(Global Change Biology, Volume 16, Issue 4, pp. 1194–1212, April 2010)
- C. J. Brown et al.


High Arctic vegetation after 70 years: a repeated analysis from Svalbard
(Polar Biology, Volume 33, Issue 5, pp. 635-639, May 2010)
- Karel Prach et al.


Elevated CO2 induces differences in nodulation of soybean depending on bradyrhizobial strain and method of inoculation
(Plant and Soil, Volume 331, Issue 1-2, pp. 115-127, June 2010)
- Danielle Prévost et al.


Implications of twenty-first century climate change on Northeastern United States maple syrup production: impacts and adaptations
(Climatic Change, Volume 100, Issue 3-4, pp. 685-702, June 2010)
- Christopher B. Skinner et al.


Rising concentrations of atmospheric CO2 have increased growth in natural stands of quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides)
(Global Change Biology, Volume 16, Issue 8, pp. 2186–2197, August 2010)
- Christopher T. Cole et al.


Climate warming and biomass accumulation of terrestrial plants: a meta-analysis
(New Phytologist, Volume 188, Issue 1, pp. 187–198, October 2010)
- Delu Lin et al.


Criteria for assessing climate change impacts on ecosystems
(Ecology and Evolution, Volume 1, Issue 1, pp. 63–72, September 2011)
- Craig Loehle


Sour orange fine root distribution after seventeen years of atmospheric CO2 enrichment
(Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, Volumes 162–163, pp. 85–90, September 2012)
- S. A. Prior, G. B. Runion, H. A. Torbert, Sherwood B. Idso, Bruce A. Kimball




Glaciers:

Modern Glacier Retreat on Kilimanjaro as Evidence of Climate Change: Observations and Fact
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 24, Number 3, pp. 329-339, March 2004)
- Georg Kaser et al.


Recent glacier advances in Norway and New Zealand: A comparison of their glaciological and meteorological causes
(Geografiska Annaler: Series A, Physical Geography, Volume 87, Issue 1, pp. 141-157, March 2005)
- T. Chinn et al.


Kilimanjaro Glaciers: Recent areal extent from satellite data and new interpretation of observed 20th century retreat rates
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Number 16, August 2006)
- Nicolas J. Cullen et al.


Very high-elevation Mont Blanc glaciated areas not affected by the 20th century climate change
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 112, Issue D9, May 2007)
- C. Vincent et al.


Contribution of Alaskan glaciers to sea-level rise derived from satellite imagery
(Nature Geoscience, Volume 3, Issue 2, pp. 92-95, February 2010)
- E. Berthier


Is the decline of ice on Kilimanjaro unprecedented in the Holocene?
(The Holocene, Volume 20, Number 7, pp. 1079-1091, November 2010)
- Georg Kaser et al.


Is the recessional pattern of Himalayan glaciers suggestive of anthropogenically induced global warming?
(Arabian Journal of Geosciences, Volume 4, Issue 7-8, pp. 1087-1093, November 2011)
- Rameshwar Bali et al.


Slight mass gain of Karakoram glaciers in the early twenty-first century (PDF)
(Nature Geoscience, Volume 5, Issue 5, pp. 322-325, May 2012)
- Julie Gardelle et al.




Greenland:

Survey of Greenland instrumental temperature records: 1873–2001 (PDF)
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 22, Issue 15, pp. 1829–1847, December 2002)
- Jason E. Box


Recent cooling in coastal southern Greenland and relation with the North Atlantic Oscillation (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 30, Number 3, February 2003)
- Edward Hanna et al.


Global Warming and the Greenland Ice Sheet (PDF)
(Climatic Change, Volume 63, Issue 1-2, pp. 201-221, March 2004)
- Petr Chylek et al.


Recent Ice-Sheet Growth in the Interior of Greenland (PDF)
(Science, Volume 310, Number 5750, pp. 1013-1016, November 2005)
- Ola M. Johannessen et al.


Greenland warming of 1920–1930 and 1995–2005 (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Number 11, June 2006)
- Petr Chylek et al.


Rapid Changes in Ice Discharge from Greenland Outlet Glaciers (PDF)
(Science, Volume 315, Number 5818, pp. 1559-1561, March 2007)
- Ian M. Howat et al.


Remote sensing of Greenland ice sheet using multispectral near-infrared and visible radiances (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 112, Issue D24, December 2007)
- Petr Chylek et al.


Surface mass-balance changes of the Greenland ice sheet since 1866 (PDF)
(Annals of Glaciology, Volume 50, Number 50, pp. 178-184, March 2009)
- L.M. Wake et al.


Greenland Ice Sheet Surface Air Temperature Variability: 1840–2007 (PDF)
(Journal of Climate, Volume 22, Issue 14, pp. 4029–4049, July 2009)
- Jason E. Box et al.


Ocean regulation hypothesis for glacier dynamics in southeast Greenland and implications for ice sheet mass changes (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 115, Issue F3, August 2010)
- T. Murray et al.


A reconstruction of annual Greenland ice melt extent, 1784–2009
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 116, Issue D8, April 2011)
- Oliver W. Frauenfeld, Paul C. Knappenberger, Patrick J. Michaels


High variability of Greenland surface temperature over the past 4000 years estimated from trapped air in an ice core (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 38, Number 21, November 2011)
- Takuro Kobashi et al.


Rapid response of Helheim Glacier in Greenland to climate variability over the past century (PDF)
(Nature Geoscience, Volume 5, Number 1, pp. 37–41, January 2012)
- Camilla S. Andresen et al.



Gulf Stream: (Thermohaline Circulation)

Tropical Stabilization of the Thermohaline Circulation in a Greenhouse Warming Simulation
(Journal of Climate, Volume 13, Issue 11, pp. 1809–1813, June 2000)
- M. Latif et al.


Abrupt climate change: An alternative view (PDF)
(Quaternary Research, Volume 65, Issue 2, pp. 191-203, March 2006)
- Carl Wunsch


Can in situ floats and satellite altimeters detect long-term changes in Atlantic Ocean overturning?
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 37, Number 6, March 2010)
- Josh K. Willis


UK newspaper (mis)representations of the potential for a collapse of the Thermohaline Circulation
(Area, Volume 42, Issue 4, pp. 444–456, December 2010)
- Neil Jennings, Mike Hulme




Hockey Stick: (MBH98, MBH99, Mann et al. 2008)

Detecting the Aerial Fertilization Effect of Atmospheric CO2 Enrichment in Tree-Ring Chronologies (PDF)
(Global Biogeochemical Cycles, Volume 7, Issue 1, pp. 81-96, 1993)
- Donald A. Graybill, Sherwood B. Idso


Corrections to the Mann et al (1998) Proxy Data Base and Northern Hemisphere Average Temperature Series (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Number 6, pp. 751-771, November 2003)
- Stephen McIntyre, Ross McKitrick


Using Historical Climate Data to Evaluate Climate Trends: Issues of Statistical Inference
(Energy & Environment, Volume 15, Number 1, pp. 1-10, January 2004)
- Craig Loehle


Reconstructing Past Climate from Noisy Data (PDF)
(Science, Volume 306, Number 5696, pp. 679-682, October 2004)
- Hans von Storch et al.


* Response to Comment on "Reconstructing Past Climate from Noisy Data"
(Science, Volume 312, Number 5773, pp. 529, April 2006)
- Hans von Storch et al.


The M&M Critique of the MBH98 Northern Hemisphere Climate Index: Update and Implications (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 1, pp. 69-100, January 2005)
- Stephen McIntyre, Ross McKitrick


Hockey sticks, principal components, and spurious significance (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Number 3, February 2005)
- Stephen McIntyre, Ross McKitrick


* Reply to comment by Huybers on "Hockey sticks, principal components, and spurious significance" (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Number 20, October 2005)
- Stephen McIntyre, Ross McKitrick


* Reply to comment by von Storch and Zorita on "Hockey sticks, principal components, and spurious significance" (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Number 20, October 2005)
- Stephen McIntyre, Ross McKitrick


Are multiproxy climate reconstructions robust? (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Number 23, December 2005)
- Gerd Burger, Ulrich Cubasch


Debating about the climate warming
(Progress in Natural Science, Volume 16, Issue 1, pp. 1-6, January 2006)
- Wang Shaowu et al.


Bias and Concealment in the IPCC Process: The "Hockey-Stick" Affair and Its Implications (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 7-8, pp. 951-983, December 2007)
- David Holland


Proxy inconsistency and other problems in millennial paleoclimate reconstructions (PDF)
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 106, Number 6, February 2009)
- Stephen McIntyre, Ross McKitrick


A mathematical analysis of the divergence problem in dendroclimatology (PDF)
(Climatic Change, Volume 94, Issue 3-4, June 2009)
- Craig Loehle


A statistical analysis of multiple temperature proxies: Are reconstructions of surface temperatures over the last 1000 years reliable? (PDF)
(Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 5, Number 1, pp. 5-44, March 2011)
- Blakeley B. McShane, Abraham J. Wyner


* Discussion of: A statistical analysis of multiple temperature proxies: Are reconstructions of surface temperatures over the last 1000 years reliable? (PDF)
(Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 5, Number 1, pp. 55-60, March 2011)
- Stephen McIntyre, Ross McKitrick


* Rejoinder: A Statistical Analysis of Multiple Temperature Proxies: Are Reconstructions of Surface Temperatures over the Last 1000 Years Reliable? (PDF)
(Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 5, Number 1, pp. 99-123, March 2011)
- Blakeley B. McShane, Abraham J. Wyner



Medieval Warm Period:

The Little Ice Age as Recorded in the Stratigraphy of the Tropical Quelccaya Ice Cap
(Science, Volume 234, Number 4774, pp. 361-364, October 1986)
- L. G. Thompson et al.


Glacial geological evidence for the medieval warm period (PDF)
(Climatic Change, Volume 26, Issue 2-3, pp. 143-169, March 1994)
- Jean M. Grove, Roy Switsur


Tree-ring and glacial evidence for the medieval warm epoch and the little ice age in southern South America
(Climatic Change, Volume 26, Issue 2-3, pp. 183-197, March 1994)
- Ricardo Villalba


Evidence for the existence of the medieval warm period in China
(Climatic Change, Volume 26, Issue 2-3, pp. 289-297, March 1994)
- De'Er Zhang


The Little Ice Age and Medieval Warm Period in the Sargasso Sea
(Science, Volume 274, Number 5292, pp. 1503-1508, November 1996)
- Lloyd D. Keigwin


Time scales and trends in the central England temperature data (1659–1990): A wavelet analysis
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 24, Number 11, pp. 1351-1354, June 1997)
- Sallie Baliunas, Peter Frick, Dmitry Sokoloff, Willie H. Soon


Past Temperatures Directly from the Greenland Ice Sheet (PDF)
(Science, Volume 282, Number 5387, pp. 268-271, October 1998)
- D. Dahl-Jensen et al.


The Little Ice Age and Medieval Warming in South Africa (PDF)
(South African Journal of Science, Volume 96, Number 3, pp. 121-126, 2000)
- P. D. Tyson, W. Karlen, K. Holmgren, G. A. Heiss


Caribbean sea surface temperatures: Two‐to‐three degrees cooler than present during the Little Ice Age
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 27, Number 20, pp. 3365-3368, October 2000)
- Amos Winter, Hiroshi Ishioroshi, Tsuyoshi Watanabe, Tadamichi Oba, John R. Christy


Was the Medieval Warm Period Global? (PDF)
(Science, Volume 291, Number 5508, pp. 1497-1499, February 2001)
- Wallace S. Broecker


Low-Frequency Signals in Long Tree-Ring Chronologies for Reconstructing Past Temperature Variability (PDF)
(Science, Volume 295, Number 5563, pp. 2250-2253, March 2002)
- Jan Esper et al.


Evidence for a 'Medieval Warm Period' in a 1,100 year tree-ring reconstruction of past austral summer temperatures in New Zealand
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 29, Number 14, pp. 1-4, July 2002)
- E. R. Cook, J. G. Palmer, R. D'Arrigo


The 'Mediaeval Warm Period' drought recorded in Lake Huguangyan, tropical South China
(The Holocene, Volume 12, Number 5, pp. 511-516, July 2002)
- Guoqiang Chu et al.


The Medieval Warm Period in the Daihai Area
(Journal of Lake Sciences, Volume 14, Number 3, pp. 209-216, September 2002)
- Z. Jin et al.


Proxy climatic and environmental changes of the past 1000 years (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 23, Number 2, pp. 89–110, January 2003)
- Willie H. Soon, Sallie L. Baliunas


* Comment on "On Past Temperatures and Anomalous Late-20th Century Warmth" (PDF)
(Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, Volume 84, Issue 44, pp. 473-476, November 2003)
- Willie Soon, Sallie Baliunas, David Legates


Reconstructing Climatic and Environmental Changes of the Past 1000 Years: A Reappraisal (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Number 2-3, pp. 233-296, May 2003)
- Willie H. Soon, Sallie L. Baliunas, Sherwood B. Idso, Craig Idso, David R. Legates


* Comment on "On Past Temperatures and Anomalous Late-20th Century Warmth" (PDF)
(Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, Volume 84, Issue 44, pp. 473-476, November 2003)
- Willie Soon, Sallie Baliunas, David Legates


Late Holocene surface ocean conditions of the Norwegian Sea (Vøring Plateau)
(Paleoceanography, Volume 18, Number 2, June 2003)
- Carin Andersson et al.


A 700 year record of Southern Hemisphere extratropical climate variability
(Annals of Glaciology, Volume 39, Number 1, pp. 127-132, June 2004)
- P. A. Mayewski et al.


Medieval climate warming and aridity as indicated by multiproxy evidence from the Kola Peninsula, Russia
(Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, Volume 209, Issues 1-4, pp. 113-125, July 2004)
- K. V. Kremenetski et al.


Estimating Climatic Timeseries From Multi-Site Data Afflicted With Dating Error (PDF)
(Mathematical Geology, Volume 37, Number 2, pp. 127-140, February 2005)
- Craig Loehle


Reconstruction of temperature in the Central Alps during the past 2000 yr from a δ18O stalagmite record (PDF)
(Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 235, Issues 3-4, pp. 741-751, July 2005)
- A. Mangini et al.


A 2000-year global temperature reconstruction based on non-treering proxies (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 7-8, pp. 1049-1058, December 2007)
- Craig Loehle


* Correction to: A 2000-Year Global Temperature Reconstruction Based on Non-Tree Ring Proxies (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 19, Number 1, pp. 93-100, January 2008)
- Craig Loehle, J. Huston McCulloch


* Reply To: Comments on Loehle, "correction To: A 2000-Year Global Temperature Reconstruction Based on Non-Tree Ring Proxies"
(Energy & Environment, Volume 19, Number 5, pp. 775-776, September 2008)
- Craig Loehle


Climate and environment reconstruction during the Medieval Warm Period in Lop Nur of Xinjiang, China
(Chinese Science Bulletin, Volume 53, Number 19, pp. 3016-3027, October 2008)
- ChunMei Ma


Torneträsk tree-ring width and density ad 500–2004: a test of climatic sensitivity and a new 1500-year reconstruction of north Fennoscandian summers
(Climate Dynamics, Volume 31, Issue 7-8, December 2008)
- Hakan Grudd


"Medieval Warm Period" on the northern slope of central Tianshan Mountains, Xinjiang, NW China
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 36, Number 11, June 2009)
- Yun Zhang et al.


Evidence for a warmer period during the 12th and 13th centuries AD from chironomid assemblages in Southampton Island, Nunavut, Canada
(Quaternary Research, Volume 72, Issue 1, pp. 27-37, July 2009)
- Nicolas Rolland et al.


Temperature variation through 2000 years in China: An uncertainty analysis of reconstruction and regional difference
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 37, Number 3, February 2010)
- Q.-S. Ge et al.


Two millennia of North Atlantic seasonality and implications for Norse colonies (PDF)
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, March 2010)
- William P. Patterson et al.


Persistent multi-decadal Greenland temperature fluctuation through the last millennium (PDF)
(Climatic Change, Volume 100, Issue 3-4, pp. 733-756, June 2010)
- Takuro Kobashi et al.


Reconstruction of the Earth’s surface temperature based on data of deep boreholes, global warming in the last millennium, and long-term solar cyclicity. Part 1. Experimental data
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 50, Number 3, pp. 383-392, June 2010)
- V. A. Dergachev, O. M. Raspopov


Reconstruction of the Earth’s surface temperature based on data of deep boreholes, global warming in the last millennium, and long-term solar cyclicity. Part 2. Experimental data analysis
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 50, Number 3, pp. 393-402, June 2010)
- V. A. Dergachev, O. M. Raspopov


Six millennia of summer temperature variation based on midge analysis of lake sediments from Alaska
(Quaternary Science Reviews, Volume 29, Issues 23–24, pp. 3308-3316, November 2010)
- Benjamin F. Clegg et al.


Amplitudes, rates, periodicities and causes of temperature variations in the past 2485 years and future trends over the central-eastern Tibetan Plateau (PDF)
(Chinese Science Bulletin, Volume 56, Issue 28-29, pp. 2986-2994, October 2011)
- Yu Liu et al.


The extra-tropical Northern Hemisphere temperature in the last two millennia: reconstructions of low-frequency variability (PDF)
(Climate of the Past, Volume 8, Issue 2, pp. 765-786, April 2012)
- B. Christiansen, F. C. Ljungqvist


Variability and extremes of northern Scandinavian summer temperatures over the past two millennia (PDF)
(Global and Planetary Change, Volumes 88–89, pp. 1-9, May 2012)
- Jan Esper et al.



Roman Warm Period:

Roman vineyards in Britain: stratigraphic and palynological data from Wollaston in the Nene Valley, England
(Antiquity, Volume 75, Number 290, pp. 745–757, 2001)
- A. G. Brown et al.


Climate variability in the SE Alps of Italy over the past 17 000 years reconstructed from a stalagmite record (PDF)
(Boreas, Volume 34, Issue 4, pp. 445–455, November 2005)
- Silvia Frisi et al.


Variability of the North Atlantic Current during the last 2000 years based on shelf bottom water and sea surface temperatures along an open ocean/shallow marine transect in western Europe
(The Holocene, Volume 16, Number 7, pp. 1017-1029, November 2006)
- Jon Eiriksson et al.


Late Holocene glacial and periglacial evolution in the upper Orco Valley, northwestern Italian Alps
(Quaternary Research, Volume 71, Issue 1, pp. 1-8, January 2009)
- Carlo Giraudi


Global warming during the Roman era?
(Rendiconti Lincei, Volume 22, Issue 4, pp. 403-408, December 2011)
- Michele Caputo, Francesco Mulargia


Short term climate variability during the "Roman Classical Period" in the eastern Mediterranean
(Quaternary Science Reviews, Volume 30, Issue 27-28, pp. 3880-3891, December 2011)
- Liang Chen




Ocean Acidification:

Modern-age buildup of CO2 and its effects on seawater acidity and salinity
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Number 10, May 2006)
- Hugo A. Loáiciga


Phytoplankton Calcification in a High-CO2 World
(Science, Volume 320, Number 5874, pp. 336-340, April 2008)
- M. Debora Iglesias-Rodriguez et al.


Elevated water temperature and carbon dioxide concentration increase the growth of a keystone echinoderm
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 106, Issue 23, pp. 9316-9321, June 2009)
- Rebecca A. Gooding et al.


Marine calcifiers exhibit mixed responses to CO2-induced ocean acidification
(Geology, Volume 37, Number 12, pp. 1131-1134, December 2009)
- Justin B. Ries et al.


Vulnerability of marine biodiversity to ocean acidification: A meta-analysis
(Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, Volume 86, Issue 2, pp. 157-164, January 2010)
- I. E. Hendriks, C.M. Duarte, M. Alvarez


* Ocean acidification: Separating evidence from judgment – A reply to Dupont et al.
(Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, Volume 89, Issue 2, pp. 186-190, September 2010)
- I. E. Hendriks, C.M. Duarte




Permafrost:

Is the thermal regime of permafrost determined by solar rhythms?
(Cold Regions Science and Technology, Volume 23, Issue 1, pp. 93-98, November 1994)
- Vadim V. Kazantsev


Near-surface permafrost degradation: How severe during the 21st century?
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 34, Number 9, May 2007)
- G. Delisle


Ancient Permafrost and a Future, Warmer Arctic
(Science, Volume 321, Number 5896, pp. 1648, September 2008)
- Duane G. Froese et al.


* Implications of ancient ice: Response
(Science, Volume 323, Number 5915, pp. 714-715, February 2009)
- Duane G. Froese et al.


Shrub expansion may reduce summer permafrost thaw in Siberian tundra
(Global Change Biology, Volume 16 Issue 4, pp. 1296-1305, October 2009)
- D. Blok et al.




Polar Bears:

Polar bears of western Hudson Bay and climate change: Are warming spring air temperatures the “ultimate” survival control factor? (PDF)
(Ecological Complexity, Volume 4, Issue 3, pp. 73-84, September 2007)
- M. G. Dyck, W. Soon, R. K. Baydack, D. R. Legates, S. Baliunas, T. F. Ball, L. O. Hancock


* Reply to response to Dyck et al. (2007) on polar bears and climate change in western Hudson Bay by Stirling et al. (2008) (PDF)
(Ecological Complexity, Volume 5, Issue 4, pp. 289-302, December 2008)
- M. G. Dyck, W. Soon, R. K. Baydack, D. R. Legates, S. Baliunas, T. F. Ball, L. O. Hancock


Polar Bear Population Forecasts: A Public-Policy Forecasting Audit (PDF)
(Interfaces, Volume 38, Number 5, pp. 382-405, September-October 2008)
- J. Scott Armstrong, Kesten C. Green, Willie H. Soon


Nuclear Genomic Sequences Reveal that Polar Bears Are an Old and Distinct Bear Lineage
(Science 20, Volume 336, Number 6079, pp. 344-347, April 2012)
- Frank Hailer et al.


Population ecology of polar bears in Davis Strait, Canada and Greenland
(The Journal of Wildlife Management, Volume 77, Issue 3, pp. 463-476, April 2013)
- Elizabeth Peacock, Mitchell K. Taylor, Jeffrey Laake, Ian Stirling




Sea Level:

Sea-Level Changes and Earth's Rate of Rotation
(Journal of Coastal Research, Volume 8, Number 4, pp. 966-971, 1992)
- Nils-Axel Morner


Sea Level and Climate—The Decadal-to-Century Signals
(Journal of Coastal Research, Issue 17, pp. 261-268, 1995)
- Nils-Axel Morner


New approaches raise questions about future sea level change
(Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, Volume 77, Number 40, pp. 385, 1996)
- M. Baltuck et al.


Estimating future sea level changes from past records (PDF)
(Global and Planetary Change, Volume 40, Issues 1-2, pp. 49-54, January 2004)
- Nils-Axel Morner


* Comment on comment by Nerem et al. (2007) on "Estimating future sea level changes from past records" by Nils-Axel Mörner (2004)
(Global and Planetary Change, Volume 62, Issues 3-4, pp. 219-220, June 2008)
- Nils-Axel Morner


New perspectives for the future of the Maldives (PDF)
(Global and Planetary Change, Volume 40, Issue 1-2, pp. 177-182, January 2004)
- Nils-Axel Morner, Michael Tooley, Goran Possnert


* Reply to the comment of P.S. Kench et al. on "New perspectives for the future of the Maldives" by N.A. Morner et al.
(Global and Planetary Change, Volume 47, Issue 1, pp. 70-71, February 2005)
- Nils-Axel Morner, Michael Tooley


The Maldives project: a future free from sea-level flooding
(Contemporary South Asia, Volume 13, Number 2, pp. 149-155, June 2004)
- Nils-Axel Morner


Snowfall-Driven Growth in East Antarctic Ice Sheet Mitigates Recent Sea-Level Rise
(Science, Volume 308, Number 5730, pp. 1898-1901, June 2005)
- Curt H. Davis et al.


Low sea level rise projections from mountain glaciers and icecaps under global warming
(Nature, Volume 439, Number 7074, pp. 311-313, November 2005)
- Sarah C. B. Raper, Roger J. Braithwaite


On the decadal rates of sea level change during the twentieth century
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 34, Issue 1, January 2007)
- S. J. Holgate


Geocentric sea-level trend estimates from GPS analyses at relevant tide gauges world-wide
(Global and Planetary Change, Volume 57, Issues 3-4, pp. 396-406, June 2007)
- G. Woppelmann et al.


Sea Level Changes and Tsunamis, Environmental Stress and Migration Overseas: The Case of the Maldives and Sri Lanka
(Internationales Asienforum, Volume 38, Number 3-4, pp. 353–374, November 2007)
- Nils-Axel Morner


Trends in UK mean sea level revisited
(Geophysical Journal International, Volume 176, Issue 1, pp. 19–30, January 2009)
- P. L. Woodworth et al.


New Perspective on Global Warming & Sea Level Rise: Modest Future Rise with Reduced Threat (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 7, pp. 1067-1074, November 2009)
- Madhav L. Khandekar


Sea Level Changes in Bangladesh New Observational Facts
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 3, pp. 235-250, July 2010)
- Nils-Axel Morner


Some problems in the reconstruction of mean sea level and its changes with time
(Quaternary International, Volume 221, Issues 1-2, pp. 3-8, July 2010)
- Nils-Axel Morner


Is There Evidence Yet of Acceleration in Mean Sea Level Rise around Mainland Australia?
(Journal of Coastal Research, Volume 27, Issue 2, pp. 368-377, March 2011)
- P. J. Watson


Sea-Level Acceleration Based on U.S. Tide Gauges and Extensions of Previous Global-Gauge Analyses (PDF)
(Journal of Coastal Research, Volume 27, Issue 3, pp. 409–417, May, 2011)
- J. R. Houston, R. G. Dean


* Reply to: Rahmstorf, S. and Vermeer, M., 2011. Discussion of: Houston, J.R. and Dean, R.G., 2011. Sea-Level Acceleration Based on U.S. Tide Gauges and Extensions of Previous Global-Gauge Analyses. Journal of Coastal Research, 27(3), 409–417 (PDF)
(Journal of Coastal Research, Volume 27, Issue 4, pp. 788–790, July 2011)
- J. R. Houston, R. G. Dean


Tropical Pacific spatial trend patterns in observed sea level: internal variability and/or anthropogenic signature?
(Climate of the Past Discussions, Volume 8, Issue 1, pp. 349-389, January 2012)
- B. Meyssignac et al.


Is there any support in the long term tide gauge data to the claims that parts of Sydney will be swamped by rising sea levels?
(Coastal Engineering, Volume 64, pp. 161-167, June 2012)
- Alberto Boretti


The Inconvenient Truth: Ocean Level Not Rising in Australia
(Energy & Environment, Volume 23, Number 5, pp. 801-818, July 2012)
- Alberto Boretti, Thomas Watson


Is there a 60-year oscillation in global mean sea level?
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 39, Issue 18, September 2012)
- Don P. Chambers et al.


Present-To-Future Sea Level Changes: The Australian Case (PDF)
(Environmental Science: An Indian Journal, Volume 8, Issue 2, pp. 43-51, 2013)
- Nils-Axel Morner, Albert Parker


Multi-scale dynamical analysis (MSDA) of sea level records versus PDO, AMO, and NAO indexes (PDF)
(Climate Dynamics, April 2013)
- Nicola Scafetta


Sea Level Changes Past Records and Future Expectations
(Energy & Environment, Volume 24, Number 3-4, pp. 509-536, June 2013)
- Nils-Axel Morner




Species Extinctions:

Species loss revisited
(Society, Volume 30, Number 1, pp. 41-46, November 1993)
- Julian L. Simon, Aaron Wildavsky


Forecasting the Effects of Global Warming on Biodiversity
(BioScience, Volume 57, Number 3, pp. 227-236, March 2007)
- Daniel B. Botkin et al.


Riding the Wave: Reconciling the Roles of Disease and Climate Change in Amphibian Declines
(PLoS Biology, Volume 6, Number 3, pp. 441-454, March 2008)
- Karen R. Lips, Jay Diffendorfer, Joseph R. Mendelson III, Michael W. Sears


Climate as a Driver of Evolutionary Change
(Current Biology, Volume 19, Issue 14, pp. R575–R583, July 2009)
- Douglas H. Erwin


Tropical cloud forest climate variability and the demise of the Monteverde golden toad
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, March 2010)
- Kevin J. Anchukaitis, Michael N. Evans


Species–area relationships always overestimate extinction rates from habitat loss (PDF)
(Nature, Volume 473, Number 7347, pp. 368–371, May 2011)
- Fangliang He, Stephen P. Hubbell


Historical bird and terrestrial mammal extinction rates and causes
(Diversity and Distributions, Volume 18, Issue 1, pp. 84–91, January 2012)
- Craig Loehle, Willis Eschenbach




Natural Disasters:

Human Factors Explain the Increased Losses from Weather and Climate Extremes (PDF)
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 81, Issue 3, pp. 437-442, March 2000)
- Stanley A. Changnon, Roger A. Pielke Jr., David Changnon, Richard T. Sylves, Roger Pulwarty


Perceived Change in Risk of Natural Disasters Caused by Global Warming (PDF)
(Australian Journal of Emergency Management, Volume 17, Issue 3, November 2002)
- Chris de Freitas


Normalised Australian insured losses from meteorological hazards: 1967–2006
(Environmental Science & Policy, Volume 11, Issue 5, pp. 371–378, August 2008)
- Ryan P. Crompton, K. John McAneney


Have Disaster Losses Increased Due to Anthropogenic Climate Change? (PDF)
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 92 Issue 1, pp. 39-46, January 2011)
- Laurens M. Bouwer


Are Extreme Weather Events on the Rise?
(Energy & Environment, Volume 24, Number 3-4, pp. 537-550, June 2013)
- Madhav L Khandekar




Droughts, Floods:

Floods, droughts and climate change
(South African Journal of Science, Volume 91, Number 8, pp. 403-408, August 1995)
- William J. R. Alexander


Greater drought intensity and frequency before AD 1200 in the Northern Great Plains, USA
(Nature, Volume 384, Number 6609, pp. 552-554, December 1996)
- Kathleen R. Laird et al.


Possible solar forcing of century-scale drought frequency in the northern Great Plains
(Geology, Volume 27, Number 3, pp. 263-266, March 1999)
- Zicheng Yu, Emi Ito


Nine Fallacies of Floods (PDF)
(Climatic Change, Volume 42, Number 2, pp. 413-438, June 1999)
- Roger A. Pielke Jr.


Rainfall and drought in equatorial east Africa during the past 1,100 years
(Nature, Volume 403, Number 6768, pp. 410-414, January 2000)
- Dirk Verschuren et al.


Tree-ring data document 16th century megadrought over North America (PDF)
(Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, Volume 81, Issue 12, pp. 121, March 2000)
- David W. Stahle et al.


Have streamflow droughts in Europe become more severe or frequent?
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 21, Issue 3, pp. 317-333, April 2001)
- Hege Hisdal et al.


Solar Forcing of Drought Frequency in the Maya Lowlands
(Science, Volume 292, Number 5520, pp. 1367-1370, May 2001)
- David A. Hodell et al.


Climatic and environmental change in Africa during the last two centuries (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 17, Number 2, pp. 123-144, August 2001)
- Sharon E. Nicholson


Claim of Largest Flood on Record Proves False
(Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, Volume 84, Number 12, pp. 109, 2003)
- N. A. Sheffer et al.


Palaeoclimatic and archaeological evidence for a 200-yr recurrence of floods and droughts linking California, Mesoamerica and South America over the past 2000 years
(The Holocene, Volume 13, Number 5, pp. 763-778, July 2003)
- Amdt Schimmelmann et al.


No upward trends in the occurrence of extreme floods in central Europe
(Nature, Volume 425, Number 6954, pp. 166-169, September 2003)
- Manfred Mudelsee et al.


Changes in Australian pan evaporation from 1970 to 2002 (PDF)
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 24, Issue 9, pp. 1077–1090, July 2004)
- Michael L. Roderick, Graham D. Farquhar


Solar variability and the levels of Lake Victoria, East Africa, during the last millenium
(Journal of Paleolimnology, Volume 33, Number 2, pp. 243-251, February 2005)
- J. Curt Stager et al.


Development of a multi-year climate prediction model
(Water SA, Volume 31, Number 2, pp. 209-218, April 2005)
- William J. R. Alexander


Trends in 20th century drought over the continental United States (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Issue 10, May 2006)
- Konstantinos M. Andreadis, Dennis P. Lettenmaier


Tree-ring reconstructed rainfall variability in Zimbabwe
(Climate Dynamics, Volume 26, Issue 7-8, pp. 677-685, June 2006)
- Matthew D. Therrell et al.


Solar forcing of Holocene droughts in a stalagmite record from West Virginia in east-central North America
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 35, Number 17, September 2008)
- Gregory S. Springer et al.


Normalised flood losses in Europe: 1970–2006
(Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences, Volume 9, Number 1, pp. 97-104, February 2009)
- J. I. Barredo


Drought in the Southeastern United States: Causes, Variability over the Last Millennium, and the Potential for Future Hydroclimate Change
(Journal of Climate, Volume 22, Issue 19, pp. 5021–5045, October 2009)
- Richard Seager


Critique of Drought Models in the Australian Drought Exceptional Circumstances Report (DECR)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 5, pp. 425-436, September 2010)
- David R. B. Stockwell


Drought duration and frequency in the U.S. Corn Belt during the last millennium (AD 992–2004) (PDF)
(Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, Volume 151, Issue 2, pp. 154–162, February 2011)
- Michael C. Stambaugh et al.


A long-term perspective on a modern drought in the American Southeast (PDF)
(Environmental Research Letters, Volume 7, Number 1, pp. 1-8, January-March 2012)
- N. Pederson et al.


Little change in global drought over the past 60 years (PDF)
(Nature, Volume 491, Issue 7424, pp. 435-438, November 2012)
- Justin Sheffield et al.




Earthquakes:

Normalized Earthquake Damage and Fatalities in the United States: 1900–2005 (PDF)
(Natural Hazards Review, Volume 10, Issue 3, pp. 84-101, August 2009)
- Kevin Vranes, Roger Pielke Jr.


About climate-seismicity coupling from correlation analysis (PDF)
(Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences, Volume 10, Number 2, pp. 299-304, February 2010)
- O. Molchanov




Heat Waves:

Was the 2003 European summer heat wave unusual in a global context? (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Number 23, December 2006)
- Thomas N. Chase, Klaus Wolter, Roger A. Pielke Sr., Ichtiaque Rasool


* Reply to comment by W. M. Connolley on "Was the 2003 European summer heat wave unusual in a global context?" (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 35, Number 2, January 2008)
- Thomas N. Chase, Klaus Wolter, Roger A. Pielke Sr., Ichtiaque Rasool


Was there a basis for anticipating the 2010 Russian heat wave? (PDf)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 38, Number 6, March 2011)
- Randall Dole et al.


Deadly 2010 Russian heat wave not a consequence of climate change
(Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, Volume 92, Issue 18, pp. 160-160, May 2011)
- Colin Schultz


Dynamics of solar activity and anomalous weather in summer 2010: 1. Sector boundaries: Anticyclone formation and destruction
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 51, Number 4, pp. 444-449, August 2011)
- K. G. Ivanov, A. F. Kharshiladze


The dynamics of solar activity and anomalous weather of summer 2010: 2. Relationship with the active longitude zone; effects in the west and east
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 52, Number 1, pp. 1-15, February 2012)
- K. G. Ivanov, A. F. Kharshiladze


European hot summers associated with a reduction of cloudiness
(Journal of Climate, Volume 25, Issue 10, pp. 3637-3644, May 2012)
- Qiuhong Tang et al.


Large scale flow and the long-lasting blocking high over Russia: Summer 2010
(Monthly Weather Review, Volume 140 Issue 9, pp. 2967-2981, September 2012)
- Andrea Schneidereit et al.




Hurricanes:

Carbon dioxide and hurricanes: Implications of Northern Hemispheric warming for Atlantic/Caribbean storms
(Meteorology and Atmospheric Physics, Volume 42, Issue 3-4, pp. 259-263, September 1990)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Robert C. Balling Jr., Randall S. Cerveny


* Reply to comments of K. A. Emanuel on "carbon dioxide and hurricanes: Implications of northern hemispheric warming for Atlantic/Caribbean storms"
(Meteorology and Atmospheric Physics, Volume 47, Issue 1, pp. 85-88, March 1991)
- Sherwood B. Idso, Robert C. Balling Jr., Randall S. Cerveny


A Climatology of Intense (or Major) Atlantic Hurricanes (PDF)
(Monthly Weather Review, Volume 121, Issue 6, pp. 1703-1713, June 1993)
- Christopher W. Landsea


Downward trends in the frequency of intense at Atlantic Hurricanes during the past five decades (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 23, Number 13, pp. 1697-1700, June 1996)
- Christopher W. Landsea et al.


* Reply to "Comment on ‘Downward trends in the frequency of intense Atlantic hurricanes during the past 5 decades' by C. W. Landsea et al." (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 24, Number 17, pp. 2205-2205, September 1997)
- Christopher W. Landsea et al.


Tropical Cyclones and Global Climate Change: A Post-IPCC Assessment (PDF)
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 79, Issue 1, pp. 19–38, January 1998)
- A. Henderson-Sellers, H. Zhang, G. Berz, K. Emanuel, W. Gray, C. Landsea, G. Holland, J. Lighthill, S.-L. Shieh, P. Webster, K. McGuffie


Normalized Hurricane Damages in the United States: 1925–95 (PDF)
(Weather and Forecasting, Volume 13, Issue 3, pp. 621–631, September 1998)
- Roger A. Pielke Jr., Christopher W. Landsea


Landscape and Regional Impacts of Hurricanes in New England (PDF)
(Ecological Monographs, Volume 71, Number 1, pp. 27-48, February 2001)
- Emery R. Boose, Kristen E. Chamberlin, David R. Foster


Hurricane Vulnerability in Latin America and The Caribbean: Normalized Damage and Loss Potentials (PDF)
(Natural Hazards Review, Volume 4, Issue 3, pp. 101-114, August 2003)
- Roger A. Pielke Jr., Jose Rubiera, Christopher Landsea, Mario L. Fernandez, and Roberta Klein


Analysis of the duration, seasonal timing, and location of North Atlantic tropical cyclones: 1950-2002
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 30, Issue 24, December 2003)
- Robert C. Balling Jr., Randall S. Cerveny


Hurricanes and Global Warming (PDF)
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 86, Issue 11, pp. 1571–1575, November 2005)
- Roger A. Pielke Jr., Christopher W. Landsea, M. Mayfield, J. Laver, R. Pasch


* Reply to "Hurricanes and Global Warming—Potential Linkages and Consequences" (PDF)
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 87, Issue 5, pp. 628–631, May 2006)
- Roger A. Pielke Jr., Christopher W. Landsea, M. Mayfield, J. Laver, R. Pasch


Sea-surface temperatures and tropical cyclones in the Atlantic basin
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Number 9, May 2006)
- Patrick J. Michaels, Paul C. Knappenberger, Robert E. Davis


Trends in global tropical cyclone activity over the past twenty years (1986–2005) (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Number 11, May 2006)
- Philip J. Klotzbach


Analysis of tropical cyclone intensification trends and variability in the North Atlantic Basin over the period 1970-2003
(Meteorology and Atmospheric Physics, Volume 93, Issue 1-2, pp. 45-51, June 2006)
- Robert C. Balling Jr., Randall S. Cerveny


Can We Detect Trends in Extreme Tropical Cyclones? (PDF)
(Science, Volume 313, Number 5786, pp. 452-454, July 2006)
- Christopher W. Landsea, Bruce A. Harper, Karl Hoarau, John A. Knaff


Causes of the Unusually Destructive 2004 Atlantic Basin Hurricane Season (PDF)
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 87, Issue 10, pp. 1325–1333, October 2006)
- Philip J. Klotzbach, William M. Gray


Generation of the Katrine hurricane during the geomagnetic extrastrom at crossing of the heliospheric current sheet: Is it an accidental coincidence or physical essence?
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 46, Number 5, pp. 609-615, October 2006)
- K. G. Ivanov


Counting Atlantic Tropical Cyclones Back to 1900 (PDF)
(Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, Volume 88, Number 18, pp. 197-202, May 2007)
- Christopher W. Landsea


Correlation between tropical cyclones and magnetic storms during cycle 23 of solar activity
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 47, Number 3, 371-374, June 2007)
- K. G. Ivanov


Future economic damage from tropical cyclones: sensitivities to societal and climate changes (PDF)
(Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A, Volume 365, Number 1860, pp. 2717-2729, November 2007)
- Roger A. Pielke Jr.


Normalized Hurricane Damage in the United States: 1900–2005 (PDF)
(Natural Hazards Review, Volume 9, Issue 1, pp. 29-42, February 2008)
- Roger A. Pielke Jr., Joel Gratz, Christopher W. Landsea, Douglas Collins, Mark A. Saunders, Rade Musulin


On the Changes in the Number and Intensity of North Atlantic Tropical Cyclones (PDF)
(Journal of Climate, Volume 21, Issue 6, pp. 1387-1402, March 2008)
- William M. Briggs


Simulated reduction in Atlantic hurricane frequency under twenty-first-century warming conditions
(Nature Geoscience, Volume 1, Number 6, pp. 359-364, June 2008)
- Thomas R. Knutson et al.


A document-based 318-year record of tropical cyclones in the Lesser Antilles, 1690–2007
(Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, Volume 9, Issue 8, August 2008)
- Michael Chenoweth, Dmitry Divine


Multidecadal variability of Atlantic hurricane activity: 1851–2007
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 113, Issue D22, November 2008)
- Petr Chylek, Glen Lesins


Climate control of the global tropical storm days (1965–2008)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 37, Number 7, April 2010)
- Bin Wang et al.


Impact of Duration Thresholds on Atlantic Tropical Cyclone Counts (PDF)
(Journal of Climate, Volume 23, Issue 10, pp. 2508–251, May 2010)
- Christopher W. Landsea, Gabriel A. Vecchi, Lennart Bengtsson, Thomas R. Knutson


Emergence timescales for detection of anthropogenic climate change in US tropical cyclone loss data (PDF)
(Environmental Research Letters, Volume 6, Number 1, January-March 2011)
- Ryan P. Crompton, Roger A. Pielke Jr, K. John McAneney


Is the recorded increase in short-duration North Atlantic tropical storms spurious? (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 116, May 2011)
- Gabriele Villarini, Gabriel A. Vecchi, Thomas R. Knutson, James A. Smith


Recent historically low global tropical cyclone activity (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 38, Number 14, July 2011)
- Ryan N. Maue


Variability and decline in the number of severe tropical cyclones making land-fall over eastern Australia since the late nineteenth century (PDF)
(Climate Dynamics, Volume 37, Issue 3-4, pp. 647-662, August 2011)
- Jeff Callaghan, Scott B. Power


Eastern North Pacific Hurricane Season of 2010
(Monthly Weather Review, Volume 140, Issue 9, pp. 2769–2781, September 2012)
- Stacy R. Stewart, John P. Cangialosi


On the Classification of Extreme Atlantic Hurricanes Utilizing Mid-20th Century Monitoring Capabilities
(Journal of Climate, Volume 25, Issue 13, pp. 4461–4475, July 2012)
- Andrew B. Hagen, Christopher W. Landsea


Historical Global Tropical Cyclone Landfalls
(Journal of Climate, Volume 25 Issue 13, pp. 4729–4735, July 2012)
- Jessica Weinkle, Ryan Maue, Roger Pielke Jr.


Tropical cyclones in the Lesser Antilles: descriptive statistics and historical variability in cyclone energy, 1638–2009
(Climatic Change, Volume 113, Issue 3-4, pp. 583-598, August 2012)
- Michael Chenoweth, Dmitry Divine


Decreasing trend of tropical cyclone frequency in 228-year high-resolution AGCM simulations
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 39, Issue 19, October 2012)
- Masato Sugi, Jun Yoshimura


Landfalling tropical cyclones activities in the south China: intensifying or weakening?
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 32, Issue 12, pp. 1815–1824, October 2012)
- Qiang Zhang et al.


Intense tropical cyclone activities in the northern Indian Ocean
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 32, Issue 13, pp. 1935-1945, November 2012)
- Karl Hoarau, Julien Bernard, Ludovic Chalonge


Projected changes in late 21st century tropical cyclone frequency in thirteen coupled climate models from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5
(Journal of Climate, Volume 26 Issue 24, pp. 9946–9959, December 2013)
- K. J. Tory et al.




Storms:

Greenhouse warming may moderate British storminess
(Meteorology and Atmospheric Physics, Volume 46, Issue 3-4, September 1991)
- Robert C. Balling Jr., Randall S. Cerveny, T. A. Miller, Sherwood B. Idso


Changing storminess? An analysis of long-term sea level data sets (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 11, Number 2, pp. 161-172, March 1999)
- W. Bijl, R. Flather, J. G. de Ronde, T. Schmith


Climate change and extratropical storminess in the United States: An assessment?
(Journal of the American Water Resources Association, Volume 35, Number 6, pp. 1387-1398, December 1999)
- Bruce P. Hayden


Twentieth-Century Storm Activity along the U.S. East Coast
(Journal of Climate, Volume 13, Issue 10, pp. 1748-1761, May 2000)
- Keqi Zhang, Bruce C. Douglas, Stephen P. Leatherman


Seasonal, interannual, and decadal variability of storm surges at Tauranga, New Zealand
(New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research, Volume 34, Number 3, pp. 419-434, September 2000)
- W. P. De Lange, J. G. Gibb


Surges, atmospheric pressure and wind change and flooding probability on the Atlantic coast of France
(Oceanologica Acta, Volume 23, Number 6, pp. 643-661, November 2000)
- P. A. Pirazzoli


Compilation and Discussion of Trends in Severe Storms in the United States: Popular Perception v. Climate Reality
(Natural Hazards, Volume 29, Number 2, pp. 103-112, June 2003)
- Robert C. Balling Jr., Randall S. Cerveny


Indian Monsoon Variability in a Global Warming Scenario
(Natural Hazards, Volume 29, Number 2, pp. 189-206, June 2003)
- R. H. Kripalani, Ashwini Kulkarni, S. S. Sabade, M. L. Khandekar


Changes in Global Monsoon Circulations Since 1950
(Natural Hazards, Volume 29, Number 2, pp. 229-254, June 2003)
- T. N. Chase, J. A. Knaff, R. A. Pielke Sr., E. Kalnay


Shifting Economic Impacts from Weather Extremes in the United States: A Result of Societal Changes, Not Global Warming
(Natural Hazards, Volume 29, Number 2, pp. 273-290, June 2003)
- Stanley A. Changnon


North American Trends in Extreme Precipitation
(Natural Hazards, Volume 29, Number 2, pp. 291-305, June 2003)
- Kenneth E. Kunkel


Scandinavian storminess since about 1800
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Number 20, October 2004)
- Lars Barring, Hans von Storch


Trends in precipitation on the wettest days of the year across the contiguous USA
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 24, Number 15, pp. 1873-1882, December 2004)
- Patrick J. Michaels, Paul C. Knappenberger, Oliver W. Frauenfeld, Robert E. Davis


Extreme Weather Trends Vs. Dangerous Climate Change: A Need for Critical Reassessment
(Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 2, pp. 327-332, March 2005)
- Madhav L. Khandekar


A Spatial and Temporal Analysis of Damaging Snowstorms in the United States
(Natural Hazards, Volume 37, Number 3, pp. 373-389, March 2006)
- Stanley A. Changnon, David Changnon


Characteristics of long-duration precipitation events across the United States
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 34, Number 22, November 2007)
- David M. Brommer, Randall S. Cerveny, Robert C. Balling Jr.


No upward trend in normalised windstorm losses in Europe: 1970–2008 (PDF)
(Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences, Volume 10, Number 1, pp. 97-104, January 2010)
- J. I. Barredo


Changes in Snowfall in the Southern Sierra Nevada of California Since 1916 (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 3, pp. 233-234, July 2010)
- John R. Christy, Justin J. Hnilo


Decreased frequency of North Atlantic polar lows associated with future climate warming (PDF)
(Nature, Volume 467, Number 7313, pp. 309–312, September 2010)
- Matthias Zahnmatthias, Hans von Storch


Decadal variability in snow cover over the Tibetan Plateau during the last two centuries
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 38, Number 10, May 2011)
- Caiming Shen et al.


Searching for information in 133 years of California snowfall observations
(Journal of Hydrometeorology, Volume 13, Issue 3, pp. 895–912, June 2012)
- John R. Christy




Tornadoes:

Normalized Damage from Major Tornadoes in the United States: 1890–1999 (PDF)
(Weather and Forecasting, Volume 16, Issue 1, pp. 168-176, February 2001)
- Harold E. Brooks, Charles A. Doswell III


Deaths in the 3 May 1999 Oklahoma City Tornado from a Historical Perspective (PDF)
(Weather and Forecasting, Volume 17, Issue 3, pp. 354–361, June 2002)
- Harold E. Brooks, Charles A. Doswell III


Does Global Warming Influence Tornado Activity?
(Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, Volume 89, Issue 53, pp. 553-554, December 2008)
- Noah S. Diffenbaugh, Robert J. Trapp, Harold E. Brooks


The tornadoes of spring 2011 in the USA: an historical perspective (PDF)
(Weather, Volume 67, Issue 4, pp. 88-94, April 2012)
- Charles A. Doswell III, Gregory W. Carbin, Harold E. Brooks


Normalized tornado damage in the United States: 1950–2011 (PDF)
(Environmental Hazards, Volume 12, Issue 2, pp. 132-147, 2013)
- Kevin M. Simmons, Daniel Sutter, Roger Pielke Jr.




Wildfires:

Decreasing frequency of forest fires in the southern boreal zone of Québec and its relation to global warming since the end of the 'Little Ice Age'
(The Holocene, Volume 3, Number 3, pp. 255-259, 1993)
- Yves Bergeron, Sylvain Archambault


Predicting the effects of climate change on fire frequency in the southeastern Canadian boreal forest
(Water, Air, & Soil Pollution, Volume 82, Issue 1-2, pp. 437-444, May 1995)
- Y. Bergeron, M. D. Flannigan


Future Wildfire in Circumboreal Forests in Relation to Global Warming (PDF)
(Journal of Vegetation Science, Volume 9, Number 4, pp. 469-476, August 1998)
- M. D. Flannigan, Y. Bergeron, O. Engelmark, B. M. Wotton


A 1000-yr record of forest fire activity from Eclipse Icefield, Yukon, Canada (PDF)
(The Holocene, Volume 16, Number 2, pp. 200-209, 2006)
- Kaplan Yalcin et al.


Global spatial patterns and temporal trends of burned area between 1981 and 2000 using NOAA-NASA Pathfinder
(Global Change Biology, Volume 13, Issue 1, pp. 40-50, January 2007)
- D. Riano et al.


100-years of Australian bushfire property losses: Is the risk significant and is it increasing? (PDF)
(Journal of Environmental Management, Volume 90, Issue 8, pp. 2819–2822, June 2009)
- John McAneney, Keping Chen, Andy Pitman


Heterogeneous response of circumboreal wildfire risk to climate change since the early 1900s
(Global Change Biology, Volume 15, Issue 11, pp. 2751-2769, November 2009)
- Martin P. Girardin et al.


Influence of Location, Population, and Climate on Building Damage and Fatalities due to Australian Bushfire: 1925–2009 (PDF)
(Weather, Climate and Society, Volume 2, Issue 4, pp. 300–310, October 2010)
- Ryan P. Crompton, K. John McAneney, Keping Chen, Roger A. Pielke Jr., Katharine Haynes




Satellite Temperatures: (UAH)

Precise Monitoring of Global Temperature Trends from Satellites (PDF)
(Science, Volume 247, Number 4950, pp. 1558-1562, March 1990)
- Roy W. Spencer, John R. Christy


Global Atmospheric Temperature Monitoring with Satellite Microwave Measurements: Method and Results 1979-84
(Journal of Climate, Volume 3, Issue 10, pp. 1111-1128, October 1990)
- Roy W. Spencer, John R. Christy, Norman C. Grody


Precision tropospheric temperature monitoring 1979-1990
(Global and Planetary Change, Volume 4, Issues 1-3, pp. 113-120, July 1991)
- Roy W. Spencer, John R. Christy, Norman C. Grody


Precision and Radiosonde Validation of Satellite Gridpoint Temperature Anomalies. Part I: MSU Channel 2
(Journal of Climate, Volume 5, Issue 8, pp. 847-857, August 1992)
- Roy W. Spencer, John R. Christy


Precision and Radiosonde Validation of Satellite Gridpoint Temperature Anomalies. Part II: A Tropospheric Retrieval and Trends during 1979-90
(Journal of Climate, Volume 5, Issue 8, pp. 858-866, August 1992)
- Roy W. Spencer, John R. Christy


Precision Lower Stratospheric Temperature Monitoring with the MSU: Technique, Validation, and Results 1979-1991
(Journal of Climate, Volume 6, Issue 6, pp. 1194–1204, June 1993)
- Roy W. Spencer, John R. Christy


Global temperature monitoring from space
(Advances in Space Research, Volume 14, Issue 1, pp. 69-75, January 1994)
- Roy W. Spencer


Variability in Daily, Zonal Mean Lower-Stratospheric Temperatures
(Journal of Climate, Volume 7, Issue 1, pp. 106-120, January 1994)
- John R. Christy, S. James Drouilhet Jr.


Reducing Noise in the MSU Daily Lower-Tropospheric Global Temperature Dataset
(Journal of Climate, Volume 8, Issue 4, pp. 888-896, April 1995)
- John R. Christy, Roy W. Spencer, Richard T. McNider


Precision global temperatures from satellites and urban warming effects of non-satellite data
(Atmospheric Environment, Volume 29, Issue 16, pp. 1957-1961, August 1995)
- John R. Christy, James D. Goodridge


Temperature above the surface layer
(Climatic Change, Volume 31, Issue 2-4, pp. 455-474, December 1995)
- John R. Christy


Analysis of satellite-based estimates of tropospheric diurnal temperature range
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 101, Issue D8, pp. 12827-12832, 1996)
- Robert C. Balling Jr., John R. Christy


Analysis of the Merging Procedure for the MSU Daily Temperature Time Series
(Journal of Climate, Volume 11, Issue 8, pp. 2016–2041, August 1998)
- John R. Christy, Roy W. Spencer, Elena S. Lobl


Assessing levels of uncertainty in recent temperature time series
(Climate Dynamics, Volume 16, Number 8, pp. 587-601, August 2000)
- M. Stendel, John R. Christy and L. Bengtsson


MSU Tropospheric Temperatures: Dataset Construction and Radiosonde Comparisons
(Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology, Volume 17, Issue 9, pp. 1153–1170, September 2000)
- John R. Christy, Roy W. Spencer, William D. Braswell


Error Estimates of Version 5.0 of MSU–AMSU Bulk Atmospheric Temperatures
(Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology, Volume 20, Issue 5, pp. 613-629, May 2003)
- John R. Christy, Roy W. Spencer, William B. Norris, William D. Braswell


What may we conclude about global tropospheric temperature trends?
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Number 6, March 2004)
- John R. Christy, William B. Norris


Estimation of Tropospheric Temperature Trends from MSU Channels 2 and 4
(Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology, Volume 23, Issue 3, pp. 417-423, March 2006)
- Roy W. Spencer, John R. Christy, William D. Braswell, William B. Norris


Satellite and VIZ–Radiosonde Intercomparisons for Diagnosis of Nonclimatic Influences
(Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology, Volume 23, Issue 9, pp. 1181–1194, September 2006)
- John R. Christy, William B. Norris


Tropospheric temperature change since 1979 from tropical radiosonde and satellite measurements
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 112, Issue D6, March 2007)
- John R. Christy, William B. Norris, Roy W. Spencer, Justin J. Hnilo


Using limited time period trends as a means to determine attribution of discrepancies in microwave sounding unit–derived tropospheric temperature time series
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 113, Issue D5, March 2008)
- Robb M. Randall, Benjamin M. Herman


Discontinuity Issues with Radiosonde and Satellite Temperatures in the Australian Region 1979-2006
(Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology, Volume 26, Issue 3, pp. 508-522, March 2009)
- John R. Christy, William B. Norris


The Influences of TOVS Radiance Assimilation on Temperature and Moisture Tendencies in JRA-25 and ERA-40
(Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology, Volume 26, Issue 8, pp. 1435-1455, August 2009)
- Masami Sakamoto, John R. Christy


An Alternative Explanation for Differential Temperature Trends at the Surface and in the Lower Troposphere (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 114, November 2009)
- Philip J. Klotzbach, Roger A. Pielke Sr., Roger A. Pielke Jr., John R. Christy, Richard T. McNider


* Correction to "An alternative explanation for differential temperature trends at the surface and in the lower troposphere" (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 14, January 2010)
- Philip J. Klotzbach, Roger A. Pielke Sr., Roger A. Pielke Jr., John R. Christy, Richard T. McNider


Satellite Global and Hemispheric Lower Tropospheric Temperature Annual Temperature Cycle (PDF)
(Remote Sensing, Volume 2, Issue 11, pp. 2561-2570, November 2010)
- Benjamin M. Herman, Michael A. Brunke, Roger A. Pielke Sr., John R. Christy, Richard T. McNider


On the evaluation of temperature trends in the tropical troposphere (PDF)
(Climate Dynamics, Volume 36, Issue 3-4, pp. 419-430, February 2011)
- Lennart Bengtsson, Kevin I. Hodges


The role of remote sensing in monitoring global bulk tropospheric temperatures
(International Journal of Remote Sensing, Volume 32, Issue 3, pp. 671-685, February 2011)
- John R. Christy, Roy W. Spencer, William B. Norris




Urban Heat Island:

Historical Temperature Trends in the United States and the Effect of Urban Population Growth
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 94, Issue D3, pp. 3359-3363, March 1989)
- Robert C. Balling Jr., Sherwood B. Idso


Urban heat island
(International Journal of Remote Sensing, Volume 13, Issue 12, pp. 2319-2336, August 1992)
- H. H. Kim


Intensity and form of the urban heat island in barcelona
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 14, Issue 6, pp. 705–710, July 1994)
- M. Carmen Moreno-garcia


Urban Influences on South African Temperature Trends
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 16, Issue 8, pp. 935-940, August 1996)
- Warwick S. Hughes, Robert C. Balling Jr.


Temperature Trends at San Juan, Puerto Rico
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 67, Issue 11, pp. 1370-1377, November 1986)
- Claude E. Duchon


The Urban Heat Island Effect at Fairbanks, Alaska (PDF)
(Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 64, Issue 1/2, pp. 39-47, October 1999)
- N. Magee et al.


Temporal and spatial characteristics of the urban heat island of Łódź, Poland
(Atmospheric Environment, Volume 33, Issues 24–25, pp. 3885–3895, October 1999)
- Kazimierz Kłysik, Krzysztof Fortuniak


Simulated impacts of historical land cover changes on global climate in northern winter
(Climate Dynamics, Volume 16, Issue 2-3, pp. 93-105, February 2000)
- T. N. Chase et al.


Spatial distribution and microscale characteristics of the urban heat island in Tel-Aviv, Israel
(Landscape and Urban Planning, Volume 48, Issues 1–2, 20, pp. 1–18, April 2000)
- Hadas Saaroni et al.


Does the urban CO2dome of Phoenix, Arizona contribute to its heat island?
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 28, Issue 24, pp. 4599-4602, 2001)
- Robert C. Balling Jr., Randall S. Cerveny, Craig D. Idso


Impact of urbanization and land-use change on climate
(Nature, Volume 423, Number 6939, pp. 528-531, May 2003)
- Eugenia Kalnay, Ming Cai


* Climate (communication arising): Impact of land-use change on climate
(Nature, Volume 424, Number 6971, pp. 214, January 2004)
- Eugenia Kalnay, Ming Cai


The urban heat island in winter at Barrow, Alaska (PDF)
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 23, Issue 15, pp. 1889–1905, December 2003)
- Kenneth M. Hinkel et al.


Satellite-measured growth of the urban heat island of Houston, Texas
(Remote Sensing of Environment, Volume 85, Issue 3, pp. 282–289, May 2003)
- David R Streutker


Daytime urban heat island effect in high-rise and high-density residential developments in Hong Kong
(Energy and Buildings, Volume 36, Issue 6, pp. 525–534, June 2004)
- R Giridharan et al.


Climatic effects of urbanization in istanbul: a statistical and modeling analysis
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 27, Issue 5, pp. 667-679, April 2007)
- Yasemin Ezber et al.


Impact of land use and precipitation changes on surface temperature trends in Argentina
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 113, Issue D6, March 2008)
- Mario N. Nunez et al.


Impacts of Land Use/Land Cover Change on Climate and Future Research Priorities (PDF)
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 91, Issue 1, pp. 37-46, January 2010)
- Rezaul Mahmood et al.


Remote sensing of the urban heat island effect across biomes in the continental USA
(Remote Sensing of Environment, Volume 114, Issue 3, pp. 504–513, March 2010)
- Marc L. Imhoff et al.


Observed surface warming induced by urbanization in east China (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 116, Issue D14, July 2011)
- Xuchao Yang et al.


Energy consumption and the unexplained winter warming over northern Asia and North America
(Nature Climate Change, Volume 3, Issue 5, pp. 466-470, May 2013)
- Guang J. Zhang et al.




Weather Stations:

Apparent trends of mean temperature in New Zealand since 1930 (PDF)
(New Zealand Journal of Science, Volume 23, pp. 1-9, 1980)
- J. W. D. Hessell


Urban Warming
(Journal of Climate and Applied Meteorology, Volume 25, Issue 9, pp. 1265-1270, September 1986)
- G. Kukla et al.


The Recent Maximum Temperature Anomalies in Tueson: Are They Real or an Instrumental Problem?
(Journal of Climate, Volume 5, Issue 6, pp. 657-658, June 1992)
- R. Gall, K. Young, R. Schotland, J. Schmitz


Urban bias influences on long-term California air temperature trends
(Atmospheric Environment Part B: Urban Atmosphere, Volume 26, Issue 1, pp. 1-7, March 1992)
- James D. Goodridge


Long-term and recent anomalous temperature changes in Australia
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 19, Issue 23, pp. 2317-2320, December 1992)
- Robert C. Balling Jr., Sherwood B. Idso, Warwick S. Hughes


The Effects of Data Gaps on the Calculated Monthly Mean Maximum and Minimum Temperatures in the Continental United States: A Spatial and Temporal Study
(Journal of Climate, Volume 12, Issue 5, pp. 1524-1533, May 1999)
- David E. Stooksbury, Craig D. Idso, Kenneth G. Hubbard


Analysis of adjustments to the United States Historical Climatology Network (USHCN) temperature database
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 29, Number 10, May 2002)
- Robert C. Balling Jr., Craig D. Idso


Sensor and Electronic Biases/Errors in Air Temperature Measurements in Common Weather Station Networks
(Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology, Volume 21, Issue 7, pp. 1025-1032, July 2004)
- Xiaomao Lin, Ken Hubbard


Microclimate Exposures of Surface-Based Weather Stations: Implications For The Assessment of Long-Term Temperature Trends (PDF)
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 86, Issue 4, April 2005)
- Christopher A. Davey, Roger A. Pielke Sr.


Surface air temperature records biased by snow-covered surface
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 25, Issue 9, pp. 1223-1236, July 2005)
- Xiaomao Lin, Ken Hubbard, C. B. Baker


The GeoProfile metadata, exposure of instruments, and measurement bias in climatic record revisited
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 26, Issue 8, pp. 1091-1124, March 2006)
- Rezaul Mahmood et al.


Reexamination of instrument change effects in the U.S. Historical Climatology Network
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Number 15, August 2006)
- Ken Hubbard, Xiaomao Lin


Spuriously induced temperature trends in the Southeast United States
(Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 88, Issue 1-2, pp. 103-110, January 2007)
- J. Allard, B. D. Keim


Documentation of uncertainties and biases associated with surface temperature measurement sites for climate change assessment (PDF)
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 88, Number 6, pp. 913-928, June 2007)
- Roger A. Pielke Sr. et al.


Unresolved issues with the assessment of multidecadal global land surface temperature trends (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 112, Issue D24, December 2007)
- Roger A. Pielke Sr. et al.


* Reply to comment by David E. Parker et al. on "Unresolved issues with the assessment of multidecadal global land surface temperature trends" (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 114, Issue D5, March 2009)
- Roger A. Pielke Sr. et al.


Analysis of the impacts of station exposure on the U.S. Historical Climatology Network temperatures and temperature trends (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 116, Issue D14, July 2011)
- Souleymane Fall, Anthony Watts, John Nielsen-Gammon, Evan Jones, Dev Niyogi, John R. Christy, Roger A. Pielke Sr.


Trends in precipitation and temperature in Florida, USA
(Journal of Hydrology, Volumes 452-453, pp. 259-281, July 2012)
- Christopher J. Martinez et al.


Biases in the Australian High Quality Temperature Network
(Energy & Environment, Volume 23, Number 8, pp. 1273-1294, December 2012)
- David R. B. Stockwell, Kenneth Stewart


Effect of data homogenization on estimate of temperature trend: a case of Huairou station in Beijing Municipality
(Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 115, Issue 3-4, pp. 365-373, February 2014)
- Lei Zhang et al.




1,500-Year Climate Cycle:

A Pervasive Millennial-Scale Cycle in North Atlantic Holocene and Glacial Climates
(Science, Volume 278, Number 5341, pp. 1257-1266, November 1997)
- Gerard Bond et al.


Late Holocene approximately 1500 yr climatic periodicities and their implications
(Geology, Volume 26, Number 5, pp. 471-473, May 1998)
- Ian D. Campbell et al.


The 1,800-year oceanic tidal cycle: A possible cause of rapid climate change
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 97, Number 8, pp. 3814-3819, April 2000)
- Charles D. Keeling et al.


Timing of Millennial-Scale Climate Change in Antarctica and Greenland During the Last Glacial Period
(Science, Volume 291, Issue 5501, pp. 109-112, January 2001)
- Thomas Blunier et al.


Widespread evidence of 1500 yr climate variability in North America during the past 14 000 yr
(Geology, Volume 30, Issue 5, pp. 455-458, May 2002)
- André E. Viau et al.


Decadal to millennial cyclicity in varves and turbidites from the Arabian Sea: hypothesis of tidal origin
(Global and Planetary Change, Volume 34, Issues 3-4, pp. 313-325, November 2002)
- W. H. Bergera et al.


Timing of abrupt climate change: A precise clock
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 30, Number 10, pp. 17-1, May 2003)
- Stefan Rahmstorf


Possible solar origin of the 1,470-year glacial climate cycle demonstrated in a coupled model
(Nature, Volume 438, Number 7065, pp. 208-211, November 2005)
- Holger Braun et al.


The origin of the 1500-year climate cycles in Holocene North-Atlantic records (PDF)
(Climate of the Past, Volume 3, Issue 2, pp. 679-692, 2007)
- M. Debret et al.


Global Warming Every 1,500 Years: Implications for an Engineering Vision (PDF)
(Leadership and Management in Engineering, Volume 8, Number 3, pp. 153-159, July 2008)
- Dennis T. Avery


Holocene temperature records show millennial-scale periodicity (PDF)
(Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, Volume 47, Number 10, pp. 1327-1336, October 2010)
- Craig Loehle, S. F. Singer




CO2 Lags Temperature:

Coherence established between atmospheric carbon dioxide and global temperature
(Nature, Volume 343, Number 6260, pp. 709-714, February 1990)
- Cynthia Kuo et al.

"Temperature and atmospheric carbon dioxide are significantly correlated over the past thirty years. Changes in carbon dioxide content lag those in temperature by five months."
Ice core records of atmospheric CO2 around the last three glacial terminations
(Science, Volume 283, Number 5408, pp. 1712-1714, March 1999)
- Hubertus Fischer et al.

"High-resolution records from Antarctic ice cores show that carbon dioxide concentrations increased by 80 to 100 parts per million by volume 600 ± 400 years after the warming of the last three deglaciations."
Atmospheric CO2 Concentration from 60 to 20 kyr BP from the Taylor Dome ice core, Antarctica (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 27, Number 5, March 2000)
- Andreas Indermuhle et al.

"The lag was calculated for which the correlation coefficient of the CO2 record and the corresponding temperatures values reached a maximum. The simulation yields a lag of (1200 ± 700) yr."
Atmospheric CO2 Concentrations over the Last Glacial Termination
(Science, Volume 291. Number 5501, January 2001)
- Eric Monnin et al.

"The start of the CO2 increase thus lagged the start of the [temperature] increase by 800 ± 600 years."
The phase relations among atmospheric CO2 content, temperature and global ice volume over the past 420 ka (PDF)
(Quaternary Science Reviews, Volume 20, Issue 4, pp. 583-589, February 2001)
- Manfred Mudelsee

"Over the full 420 ka of the Vostok record, CO2 variations lag behind atmospheric temperature changes in the Southern Hemisphere by 1.3±1.0 ka"
Timing of Atmospheric CO2 and Antarctic Temperature Changes Across Termination III
(Science, Volume 299, Number 5613, March 2003)
- Nicolas Caillon et al.

"The sequence of events during Termination III suggests that the CO2 increase lagged Antarctic deglacial warming by 800 ± 200 years and preceded the Northern Hemisphere deglaciation."
Southern Hemisphere and Deep-Sea Warming Led Deglacial Atmospheric CO2 Rise and Tropical Warming
(Science, Volume 318, Issue 5849, September 2007)
- Lowell Stott et al.

"Deep sea temperatures warmed by ~2C between 19 and 17 ka B.P. (thousand years before present), leading the rise in atmospheric CO2 and tropical surface ocean warming by ~1000 years."
Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Concentration Across the Mid-Pleistocene Transition
(Science, Volume 324, Number 5934, pp. 1551-1554, June 2009)
- Bärbel Hönisch et al.

"The lack of a gradual decrease in interglacial PCO2 does not support the suggestion that a long-term drawdown of atmospheric CO2 was the main cause of the climate transition"
The phase relation between atmospheric carbon dioxide and global temperature (PDF)
(Global and Planetary Change, Volume 100, pp. 51–69, January 2013)
- Ole Humlum et al.

"There exist a clear phase relationship between changes of atmospheric CO2 and the different global temperature records, whether representing sea surface temperature, surface air temperature, or lower troposphere temperature, with changes in the amount of atmospheric CO2 always lagging behind corresponding changes in temperature."


Cosmic Rays:

Solar Variability and the Lower Atmosphere
(Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Volume 56, Issue 12, pp. 1240-1248, December 1975)
- Robert E. Dickinson


Solar variability influences on weather and climate: Possible connections through cosmic ray fluxes and storm intensification
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 94, Number D12, pp. 14783-14792, October 1989)
- Brian A. Tinsley, Geoffrey M. Brown, Philip H. Scherrer


Apparent Tropospheric Response to MeV-GeV Particle Flux Variations: A Connection Via Electrofreezing of Supercooled Water in High-Level Clouds?
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 96, Issue D12, pp. 22283-22296, December 1991)
- Brian A. Tinsley, Glen W. Deen


Atmospheric transparency variations associated with geomagnetic disturbances
(Journal of Atmospheric and Terrestrial Physics, Volume 54, Issue 9, pp. 1135-1138, September 1992)
- M. I. Pudovkin, S. V. Babushkina


Atmospheric transparency variations caused by cosmic rays
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 34, Number 2, pp. 251-253, August 1994)
- V. K. Roldugin, E. V. Vashenyuk


Rainfalls during great Forbush decreases
(Il Nuovo Cimento C, Volume 18, Issue 3, pp. 335-341, May 1995)
- Y. I. Stozhkov et al.


Variations of Total Cloudiness during Solar Cosmic Ray Events
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 36, Number 1, pp. 108-111, May 1995)
- S. V. Veretenenko, M. I. Pudovkin


Cloudiness decreases associated with Forbush-decreases of galactic cosmic rays
(Journal of Atmospheric and Terrestrial Physics, Volume 57, Issue 11, pp. 1349-1355, September 1995)
- M. I. Pudovkin, S. V. Veretenenko


Cosmic ray variation effects in the temperature of the high-latitudinal atmosphere
(Advances in Space Research, Volume 17, Issue 11, pp. 165-168, 1996)
- M. I. Pudovkin et al.


Variations of the cosmic rays as one of the possible links between the solar activity and the lower atmosphere
(Advances in Space Research, Volume 17, Issue 11, pp. 161-164, 1996)
- M. I. Pudovkin, S. V. Veretenenko


Hale-cycle effects in cosmic-ray intensity during the last four cycles
(Astrophysics and Space Science, Volume 246, Number 1, March 1996)
- H. Mavromichalaki, A. Belehaki, X. Rafios, I. Tsagouri


Enhancement of stratospheric aerosols after solar proton event (PDF)
(Annales Geophysicae, Volume 14, Issue 11, pp. 1119-1123, November 1996)
- O. I. Shumilov et al.


Meteorological characteristic changes in the high-latitudinal atmosphere associated with Forbush decreases of the galactic cosmic rays
(Advances in Space Research, Volume 20, Issue 6, pp. 1169-1172, 1997)
- M. I. Pudovkin et al.


Variation of Cosmic Ray Flux and Global Cloud Coverage - a Missing Link in Solar-Climate Relationships (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 59, Number 11, pp. 1225-1232, July 1997)
- Henrik Svensmark, Eigil Friis-Christensen


* Reply to comments on "Variation of cosmic ray flux and global cloud coverage - a missing link in solar-climate relationships" (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 62, Issue 1, pp. 79-80, January 2000)
- Henrik Svensmark, Eigil Friis-Christensen


Effects of the galactic cosmic ray variations on the solar radiation input in the lower atmosphere
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 59, Issue 14, pp. 1739-1746, September 1997)
- S. V. Veretenenko, M. I. Pudovkin


Influence of Cosmic Rays on Earth's Climate
(Physical Review Letters, Volume 81, Issue 22, pp. 5027-5030, November 1998)
- Henrik Svensmark


Modulation of cosmic ray precipitation related to climate (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 26, Number 14, pp. 2057-2060, July 1999)
- J. Feynman, A. Ruzmaikin


Impact of Cosmic Ray Flux Variations Caused by Changes in the Geomagnetic Dipole Moment on Climate Variability
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 40, Number 1, pp. 97-108, 2000)
- O. M. Raspopov et al.


Cosmic rays and Earth's climate
(Space Science Reviews, Volume 93, Issue 1-2, pp. 175-185, July 2000)
- Henrik Svensmark


The influence of cosmic rays on terrestrial clouds and global warming
(Astronomy & Geophysics, Volume 41, Issue 4, pp. 4.18-4.22, August 2000)
- E. Palle Bago, C. J. Butler


Cosmic Rays, Clouds, and Climate
(Space Science Reviews, Volume 94, Issue 1-2, pp. 215-230, November 2000)
- Nigel Marsh, Henrik Svensmark


Solar Variability and Clouds
(Space Science Reviews, Volume 94, Issue 1-2, pp. 397-409, November 2000)
- Jasper Kirkby, Ari Laaksonen


Low cloud properties influenced by cosmic rays
(Physical Review Letters, Volume 85, Issue 23, pp. 5004-5007, December 2000)
- Nigel Marsh, Henrik Svensmark


On the relationship of cosmic ray flux and precipitation
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 28, Number 8, pp. 1527-1530, April 2001)
- Dominic R. Kniveton, Martin C. Todd


Effects of Cosmic Rays on Atmospheric Chlorofluorocarbon Dissociation and Ozone Depletion
(Physical Review Letters, Volume 87, Issue 7, August 2001)
- Qing-Bin Lu, L. Sanche


The Effect of Solar Activity on Carbon Dioxide Concentration in the Lower Atmosphere
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 42, Number 1, pp. 135-138, 2002)
- I. A. Mironova


Shielded by the wind: the influence of the interstellar medium on the environment of Earth
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 64, Issue 7, pp. 795-804, May 2002)
- K. Scherer, H. Fichtner, O. Stawicki


Altitude variations of cosmic ray induced production of aerosols: Implications for global cloudiness and climate
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 107, Issue A7, pp. SIA 8-1, July 2002)
- Fangqun Yu


Cosmic Ray Diffusion from the Galactic Spiral Arms, Iron Meteorites, and a Possible Climatic Connection (PDF)
(Physical Review Letters, Volume 89, Number 5, July 2002)
- Nir J. Shaviv


Cosmic Rays, Clouds, and Climate (PDF)
(Science, Volume 298, Number 5599, pp. 1732-1737, November 2002)
- K. S. Carslaw, R. G. Harrison, J. Kirkby


The Spiral Structure of the Milky Way, Cosmic Rays, and Ice Age Epochs on Earth (PDF)
(New Astronomy, Volume 8, Issue 1, pp. 39-77, January 2003)
- Nir J. Shaviv


Galactic cosmic ray and El Niño-Southern Oscillation trends in International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project D2 low-cloud properties
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 108, Number D6, pp. AAC 6-1, March 2003)
- Nigel Marsh, Henrik Svensmark


Solar Influence on Earth's Climate
(Space Science Reviews, Volume 107, Issue 1-2, pp. 317-325, April 2003)
- Nigel Marsh, Henrik Svensmark


The role of cosmic rays in the atmospheric processes
(Journal of Physics G: Nuclear and Particle Physics, Volume 29, Number 5, pp. 913-923, May 2003)
- Y. I. Stozhkov


Celestial driver of Phanerozoic climate? (PDF)
(GSA Today, Volume 13, Issue 7, pp. 4-10, July 2003)
- Nir J. Shaviv, Jan Veizer


* Detailed Response to Royer et al.'s letter "CO2 as a primary driver of Phanerozoic Climate" (PDF)
(Submitted to GSA Today, 2004)
- Nir Shaviv, Jan Veizer


* CO2 as a primary driver of Phanerozoic climate: COMMENT (PDF)
(GSA Today, Volume 14, Issue 7, July 2004)
- Nir Shaviv, Jan Veizer


* Comment on "Cosmic rays, carbon dioxide, and climate" (PDF)
(Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, Volume 85, Issue 48, pp. 510, November 2004)
- Nir Shaviv, Jan Veizer


* Further response to "Cosmic Rays, Carbon Dioxide and Climate" by Rahmstorf et al. (PDF)
(Submitted to Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, 2004)
- Nir Shaviv, Jan Veizer


On the link between northern fennoscandian climate and length of the quasi-eleven-year cycle in galactic cosmic-ray flux (PDF)
(Solar Physics, Volume 218, Issue 1-2, pp. 345-357, December 2003)
- M. G. Ogurtsov et al.


Toward a solution to the early faint Sun paradox: A lower cosmic ray flux from a stronger solar wind (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 108, Number A12, pp. SSH 3-1, December 2003)
- Nir J. Shaviv


Evidence for a link between the flux of galactic cosmic rays and Earth's climate during the past 200,000 years
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 66, Issues 3-4, pp. 313-322, February-March 2004)
- M. Christl et al.


Effects of energetic solar proton events on the cyclone development in the North Atlantic (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 66, Issue 5, pp. 393-405, March 2004)
- S. V. Veretenenko, P. Thejll


Latitudinal dependence of low cloud amount on cosmic ray induced ionization (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Number 16, August 2004)
- Ilya G. Usoskin, N. Marsh, G.A. Kovaltsov, K. Mursula, O.G. Gladysheva


Precipitation, cloud cover and Forbush decreases in galactic cosmic rays
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 66, Issues 13-14, pp. 1135-1142, September 2004)
- D.R. Kniveton


Atmospheric transparency changes associated with solar wind-induced atmospheric electricity variations
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 66, Issues 13-14, pp. 1143-1149, September 2004)
- V. C. Roldugin, B. A. Tinsley


External forcing of the geomagnetic field? Implications for the cosmic ray flux—climate variability (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 66, Issues 13-14, pp. 1195-1203, September 2004)
- Jens Wendler


Long-Term Modulation of Cosmic Rays in the Heliosphere and its Influence at Earth
(Solar Physics, Volume 224, Issue 1-2, pp. 305-316, October 2004)
- K. Scherer et al.


The effects of galactic cosmic rays, modulated by solar terrestrial magnetic fields, on the climate
(Russian Journal of Earth Sciences, Volume 6, Number 5, October 2004)
- V. A. Dergachev, P. B. Dmitriev, O. M. Raspopov, B. Van Geel


Formation of large NAT particles and denitrification in polar stratosphere: possible role of cosmic rays and effect of solar activity
(Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, Volume 4, Issue 1, pp. 1037-1062, November 2004)
- F. Yu


The possible connection between ionization in the atmosphere by cosmic rays and low level clouds
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 66, Issue 18, pp. 1779-1790, December 2004)
- E. Palle, C. J. Butler, K. O'Brien


Possible influence of cosmic rays on climate through thunderstorm clouds
(Advances in Space Research, Volume 35, Issue 3, pp. 476-483, 2005)
- Lev I. Dorman, Irena V. Dorman


Estimation of long-term cosmic ray intensity variation in near future and prediction of their contribution in expected global climate change
(Advances in Space Research, Volume 35, Issue 3, pp. 496-503, 2005)
- Lev I. Dorman


Prediction of expected global climate change by forecasting of galactic cosmic ray intensity time variation in near future based on solar magnetic field data
(Advances in Space Research, Volume 35, Issue 3, pp. 491-495, 2005)
- A. V. Belov, L. I. Dorman, R. T. Gushchina, V. N. Obridko, B. D. Shelting, V. G. Yanke


Increase in the Aerosol Content of the Lower Atmosphere after the Solar Proton Flares in January and August 2002 according to Data of Lidar Observations in Europe
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 45, Number 2, pp. 221-226, March-April 2005)
- I. A. Mironova, M. I. Pudovkin


Long-term variations of the surface pressure in the North Atlantic and possible association with solar activity and galactic cosmic rays
(Advances in Space Research, Volume 35, Issue 3, pp. 484-490, May 2005)
- S. V. Veretenenko, V. A. Dergachev, P. B. Dmitriyev


Ice Age Epochs and the Sun’s Path Through the Galaxy (PDF)
(The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 626, Issue 2, pp. 844-848, June 2005)
- D. R. Gies, J. W. Helsel


On climate response to changes in the cosmic ray flux and radiative budget (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 110, Issue A8, August 2005)
- Nir J. Shaviv


Solar activity, cosmic rays, and Earth's temperature: A millennium-scale comparison
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 110, Issue A10, October 2005)
- Ilya G. Usoskin et al.


On the Link Between Cosmic Rays and Terrestrial Climate
(International Journal of Modern Physics A, Volume 20, Issue 29, pp. 6662-6665, November 2005)
- Nir J. Shaviv


Link Between Cosmic Rays and Clouds on Different Time Scales (PDF)
(Advances in Geosciences, Volume 2, pp. 321-331, 2006)
- Ilya G. Usoskin et al.


Long-term cosmic ray intensity variation and part of global climate change, controlled by solar activity through cosmic rays
(Advances in Space Research, Volume 37, Issue 8, pp. 1621-1628, 2006)
- Lev I. Dorman


Cosmic ray flux variations, modulated by the solar and earth’s magnetic fields, and climate changes. 1. Time interval from the present to 10-12 ka ago (the Holocene Epoch)
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 46, Number 1, pp. 118-128, January 2006)
- V. A. Dergachev et al.


Atmospheric Aerosol and Cloud Condensation Nuclei Formation: A Possible Influence of Cosmic Rays?
(Space Science Reviews, Volume 125, Issue 1-4, pp. 169-186, August 2006)
- F. Arnold


Initial results of a global circuit model with variable stratospheric and tropospheric aerosols
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 111, Issue D16, August 2006)
- Brian A. Tinsley, Limin Zhou


Empirical evidence for a nonlinear effect of galactic cosmic rays on clouds
(Proceedings of the Royal Society A, Volume 462, Issue 2068, pp. 1221-1233, April 2006)
- R. Giles Harrison, David B. Stephenson


Variations of Galactic Cosmic Rays and the Earth's Climate
(Astrophysics and Space Science Library, Volume 338, pp. 349-397, September 2006)
- Jasper Kirkby, Kenneth S. Carslaw


Cosmic rays and the biosphere over 4 billion years
(Astronomical Notes, Volume 327, Issue 9, pp. 871, October 2006)
- Henrik Svensmark


Different response of clouds to solar input
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Number 21, November 2006)
- Mirela Voiculescu, Ilya G. Usoskin, Kalevi Mursula


Interstellar-Terrestrial Relations: Variable Cosmic Environments, The Dynamic Heliosphere, and Their Imprints on Terrestrial Archives and Climate (PDF)
(Space Science Reviews, Volume 127, Issue 1-4, pp. 327-465, December 2006)
- K. Scherer et al.


The role of the global electric circuit in solar and internal forcing of clouds and climate
(Advances in Space Research, Volume 40, Issue 7, pp. 1126-1139, 2007)
- Brian A. Tinsley et al.


Cosmic ray flux variations, modulated by the solar and terrestrial magnetic fields, and climate changes. Part 2: The time interval from ∼10000 to ∼100000 years ago
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 47, Number 1, pp. 109-117, February 2007)
- V. A. Dergachev et al.


Secular variation in aerosol transparency of the atmosphere as the possible link between long-term variations in solar activity and climate
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 47, Number 1, pp. 118-128, February 2007)
- M. G. Ogurtsov


Cosmoclimatology: a new theory emerges
(Astronomy & Geophysics, Volume 48, Issue 1, pp. 1.18-1.24, February 2007)
- Henrik Svensmark


Evidence for a physical linkage between galactic cosmic rays and regional climate time series
(Advances in Space Research, Volume 40, Issue 3, pp. 353-364, February 2007)
- Charles A. Perrya


Experimental evidence for the role of ions in particle nucleation under atmospheric conditions
(Proceedings of the Royal Society A, Volume 463, Number 2078, pp. 385-396, February 2007)
- Henrik Svensmark et al.


200-year variations in cosmic rays modulated by solar activity and their climatic response
(Bulletin of the Russian Academy of Sciences: Physics, Volume 71, Number 7, July 2007)
- O. M. Raspopov, V. A. Dergachev


Effect of solar activity and cosmic-ray variations on the position of the Arctic front in the North Atlantic
(Bulletin of the Russian Academy of Sciences: Physics, Volume 71, Number 7, pp. 1010-1013, July 2007)
- S. V. Veretenenko, V. A. Dergachev, P. B. Dmitriev


On the possible contribution of solar-cosmic factors to the global warming of XX century
(Bulletin of the Russian Academy of Sciences: Physics, Volume 71, Number 7, July 2007)
- M. G. Ogurtsov


Cosmic Rays and Climate (PDF)
(Surveys in Geophysics, Volume 28, Issue 5-6, pp. 333-375, November 2007)
- Jasper Kirkby


Natural hazards for the Earth's civilization from space, 1. Cosmic ray influence on atmospheric processes (PDF)
(Advances in Geosciences, Volume 14, pp. 281-286, April 2008)
- Lev I. Dorman


Cosmic rays and climate of the Earth: possible connection
(Comptes Rendus Geosciences, Volume 340, Issue 7, pp. 441-450, July 2008)
- Ilya G. Usoskin, Gennady A. Kovaltsov


Variations in the cosmic ray fluxes, modulated by the solar and terrestrial magnetic fields, and climate changes. Part 3: A time interval of 1.5 Myr, including the pleistocene
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 49, Number 1, pp. 1-13, February 2009)
- V. A. Dergachev et al.


Correlation between Cosmic Rays and Ozone Depletion
(Physical Review Letters, Volume 102, Issue 11, March 2009)
- Qing-Bin Lu


Effect of long-term variability of galactic cosmic ray fluxes on climatic parameters
(Bulletin of the Russian Academy of Sciences: Physics, Volume 73, Number 3, pp. 375-377, March 2009)
- O. M. Raspopov et al.


Influence of cosmic rays and cosmic dust on the atmosphere and Earth's climate
(Bulletin of the Russian Academy of Sciences: Physics, Volume 73, Number 3, pp. 416-418, March 2009)
- V. I. Ermakov et al.


Solar activity and cosmic rays: Influence on cloudiness and processes in the lower atmosphere
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 49, Issue 2, pp. 137-145, April 2009)
- O. M. Raspopov, S. V. Veretenenko


The impact of cosmic dust on the Earth’s climate
(Moscow University Physics Bulletin, Volume 64, Number 2, pp. 214-217, April 2009)
- V. I. Ermakov et al.


Coal and fuel burning effects on the atmosphere as mediated by the atmospheric electric field and galactic cosmic rays flux
(International Journal of Global Warming, Volume 1, Issue 1-2, pp. 57-65, July 2009)
- A. Heitor Reis, Claudia Serrano


Cosmic ray decreases affect atmospheric aerosols and clouds (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 36, Number 15, August 2009)
- Henrik Svensmark, Torsten Bondo, Jacob Svensmark


A relationship between galactic cosmic radiation and tree rings
(New Phytologist, Volume 184, Issue 3, pp. 545-551, September 2009)
- Sigrid Dengel, Dominik Aeby, John Grace


The Terrestrial Cosmic Ray Flux: Its Importance for Climate
(Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, Volume 90, Issue 44, pp. 397-398, November 2009)
- Michael Ram, Michael R. Stolz, Brian A. Tinsley


Radio-optical and optical mechanisms of the influence of space factors on global climate warming
(Journal of Optical Technology, Volume 77, Issue 2, pp. 150-152, 2010)
- S. V. Avakyan, N. A. Voronin


Regional millennial trend in the cosmic ray induced ionization of the troposphere (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 72, Issue 1, pp. 19-25, January 2010)
- Ilya G. Usoskin et al.


Correlations of clouds, cosmic rays and solar irradiation over the Earth
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 72, Issues 2-3, pp. 151-156, February 2010)
- A. D. Erlykin, T. Sloan, A. W. Wolfendale


Cosmic-ray-driven electron-induced reactions of halogenated molecules adsorbed on ice surfaces: Implications for atmospheric ozone depletion
(Physics Reports, Volume 487, Issue 5, pp. 141-167, February 2010)
- Qing-Bin Lu


Results from the CERN pilot CLOUD experiment (PDF)
(Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, Volume 10, Issue 4, pp. 1635-1647, February 2010)
- J. Duplissy et al.


Solar rhythms in the characteristics of the Arctic frontal zone in the North Atlantic
(Advances in Space Research, Volume 45, Issue 3, pp. 391-397, February 2010)
- S. V. Veretenenko, V. A. Dergachev, P. B. Dmitriyev


Model of optical response of marine aerosols to Forbush decreases (PDF)
(Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, Volume 10, Issue 6, pp. 2765-2776, March 2010)
- T. Bondo, M. B. Enghoff, H. Svensmark


Galactic cosmic rays-clouds effect and bifurcation model of the Earth global climate. Part 1. Theory
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 72, Issues 5-6, pp. 398-408, April 2010)
- Vitaliy D. Rusov et al.


Strong signature of the active Sun in 100 years of terrestrial insolation data
(Annalen der Physik, Volume 522, Issue 6, pp. 372-381, June 2010)
- W. Weber


* Reply to the Comment of G. Feulner
(Annalen der Physik, Volume 523, Issue 11, pp. 951-956, November 2011)
- W. Weber


Cosmic rays linked to rapid mid-latitude cloud changes (PDF)
(Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, Volume 10, Number 22, pp. 10941-10948, November 2010)
- B. A. Laken, D. R. Kniveton, M. R. Frogley


Galactic cosmic ray variation influence on baric system dynamics at middle latitudes
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 73, Issues 2-3, pp. 366-370, February 2011)
- Irina Artamonova, Svetlana Veretenenko


Aerosol nucleation induced by a high energy particle beam (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 38, Number 9, May 2011)
- Martin B. Enghoff, Jens Olaf Pepke Pedersen, Ulrik I. Uggerhøj, Sean M. Paling, Henrik Svensmark


Dependence of GCRs influx on the solar North-South asymmetry (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 73, Issue 13, pp. 1723-1726, August 2011)
- Il-Hyun Cho et al.


Forbush decreases - clouds relation in the neutron monitor era (PDF)
(Astrophysics and Space Sciences Transactions, Volume 7, Issue 3, pp. 315-318 August 2011)
- A. Dragic et al.


Role of sulphuric acid, ammonia and galactic cosmic rays in atmospheric aerosol nucleation
(Nature, Volume 476, Number 7361, pp. 429-433, August 2011)
- Jasper Kirkby et al.


The role of cosmic and ionospheric disturbances in global climatic changes and pipeline corrosion
(Izvestiya, Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics, Volume 47, Issue 9, pp. 1143-1158, December 2011)
- S. V. Avakyan, N. A. Voronin


Cosmic rays and space weather: effects on global climate change (PDF)
(Annales Geophysicae, Volume 30, Issue 1, pp. 9-19, January 2012)
- Lev I. Dorman


Changes in cosmic ray fluxes improve correlation to global warming
(International Journal of Physical Sciences, Volume 7, Number 5, pp. 822-826, January 2012)
- A. Ollila


Effects of cosmic ray decreases on cloud microphysics (PDF)
(Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions, Volume 12, Issue 2, pp. 3595-3617, February 2012)
- J. Svensmark, M. B. Enghoff, and H. Svensmark


Evidence of nearby supernovae affecting life on Earth
(Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 423, Issue 2, pp. 1234-1253, June 2012)
- Henrik Svensmark


Aerosol nucleation in an ultra-low ion density environment
(Journal of Aerosol Science, Volume 50, pp. 75-85, August 2012)
- Jens Olaf Pepke Pedersen, Martin B. Enghoff, Sean M. Paling, Henrik Svensmark


* Response of Cloud Condensation Nuclei (> 50 nm) to changes in ion-nucleation (PDF)
(Physics Letters A, Volume 377, Issue 37, pp. 2343-2347, November 2013)
- Henrik Svensmark, Martin B. Enghoff, Jens Olaf Pepke Pedersen


Climate sensitivity to the lower stratospheric ozone variations
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volumes 90-91, pp. 9-14, December 2012)
- N. A. Kilifarska


Effect of solar and galactic cosmic rays on the duration of macrosynoptic processes
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 53, Issue 1, pp. 5-9, January 2013)
- I. V. Artamonova, S. V. Veretenenko


Cosmic-Ray-Driven Reaction and Greenhouse Effect of Halogenated Molecules: Culprits for Atmospheric Ozone Depletion and Global Climate Change
(International Journal of Modern Physics B, Volume 27, Issue 17, July 2013)
- Qing-Bin Lu


* Reply to "Comment on 'Cosmic-ray-driven reaction and greenhouse effect of halogenated molecules: Culprits for atmospheric ozone depletion and global climate change' by Dana Nuccitelli et al."
(International Journal of Modern Physics B, Volume 28, Issue 13, May 2014)
- Qing-Bin Lu


Evidence for cosmic ray modulation in temperature records from the South Atlantic Magnetic Anomaly region
(Annales Geophysicae, Volume 31, Issue 10, pp. 1833-1841, October 2013)
- E. Frigo et al.


Connection between the Earth’s Climate Change and Variations in the Geomagnetic Field and Cosmic Ray Fluxes During the Past Ten Thousands of Years
(Global Perspectives on Geography, Volume 1, Issue 4, November 2013)
- Valentin A. Dergachev, Oleg M. Raspopov, Sergey S. Vasiliev, Hogne Jungner


Atmospheric pressure variations at extratropical latitudes associated with Forbush decreases of galactic cosmic rays
(Advances in Space Research, 2014)
- I. Artamonova, S. Veretenenko


Stratospheric polar vortex as a possible reason for temporal variations of solar activity and galactic cosmic ray effects on the lower atmosphere circulation
(Advances in Space Research, 2014)
- S. Veretenenko, M. Ogurtsov




Lunar:

The 18.6-year cycle of sea surface temperature in shallow seas due to variations in tidal mixing
(Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, Volume 83, Issue C4, pp. 1967-1970, April 1978)
- John W. Loder, Christopher Garrett


Evidence for 18.6 year MN signal in temperature and drought conditions in North America since AD 1800
(Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, Volume 86, Issue C11, pp. 11055-11064, November 1981)
- Robert G. Currie


Evidence for 18.6-yr MN term in Japanese air pressure and geophysical implications
(Geophysical Journal International, Volume 69, Issue 2, pp. 321–327, May 1982)
- Robert G. Currie


Detection of 18.6 year nodal induced drought in the Patagonian Andes
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 10, Issue 11, pp. 1089–1092, November 1983)
- Robert G. Currie


On bistable phasing of 18.6 year nodal induced flood in India
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 11, Issue 1, pp. 50–53, January 1984)
- Robert G. Currie


Evidence for 18.6-year lunar nodal drought in western North america during the past millennium
(Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, Volume 89, Issue D1, pp. 1295-1308, February 1984)
- Robert G. Currie


Periodic (18.6-year) and cyclic (11-year) induced drought and flood in western North America
(Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, Volume 89, Issue D5, pp. 7215-7230, August 1984)
- Robert G. Currie


Periodic 18.6-year and cyclic 11-year induced drought and flood in northeastern China and some global implications
(Quaternary Science Reviews, Volume 4, Issue 2, pp. 109–134, 1985)
- Robert G. Currie


On bistable phasing of 18-6-year induced drought and flood in the Nile records since AD 650
(Journal of Climatology, Volume 7, Issue 4, pp. 373–389, July/August 1987)
- Robert G. Currie


Periodic 18.6-year and cyclic 10 to 11 year signals in northeastern United States precipitation data
(Journal of Climatology, Volume 8, Issue 3, pp. 255–281, May/June 1988)
- Robert G. Currie, Douglas P. O'Brien


Deterministic signals in precipitation records from the American corn belt
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 10, Issue 2, pp. 179-189, March 1990)
- Robert G. Currie, Douglas P. O'Brien


Deterministic signals in precipitation in the northwestern United States
(Water Resources Research, Volume 26, Issue 7, pp. 1649-1656, July 1990)
- Robert G. Currie, Douglas P. O'Brien


Deterministic signals in USA precipitation records: Part I
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 10, Issue 8, pp. 795-818, December 1990)
- Robert G. Currie, Douglas P. O'Brien


Deterministic signals in precipitation in Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi
(Pure and Applied Geophysics, Volume 137, Issue 3, pp. 261-279, September 1991)
- Robert G. Currie, Douglas P. O'Brien


Luni-solar 18.6-year signal in tree-rings from Argentina and Chile
(Pure and Applied Geophysics, Volume 137, Issue 3, pp. 281-300, September 1991)
- Robert G. Currie


Deterministic signals in Oklahoma and texas precipitation records
(Journal of Environmental Science and Health Part A, Volume 27, Issue 3, pp. 803-825, 1992)
- Robert G. Currie, Douglas P. O'Brien


Deterministic signals in Southeast United States precipitation data
(Journal of Environmental Science and Health Part A, Volume 27, Issue 3, pp. 827-841, 1992)
- Robert G. Currie, Douglas P. O'Brien


Deterministic signals in USA precipitation records: Part II
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 12, Issue 3, pp. 281-304, April 1992)
- Robert G. Currie, Douglas P. O'Brien


Luni-solar 18.6- and solar cycle 10–11-year signals in USA air temperature records
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 13, Issue 1, pp. 31-50, January/February 1993)
- Robert G. Currie


High-latitude oceanic variability associated with the 18.6-year nodal tide
(Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, Volume 98, Issue C3, pp. 4639-4644, 15 March 1993)
- Thomas C. Royer


Luni-solar 18.6- and 10–11-year solar cycle signals in South African rainfall
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 13, Issue 3, pp. 237-256, April 1993)
- Robert G. Currie


Observations of the 18.6-year cycle of air pressure and a theoretical model to explain certain aspects of this signal
(Climate Dynamics, Volume 8, Issue 6, pp. 287-298, July 1993)
- Douglas P. O'Brien, Robert G. Currie


Deterministic signals in European fish catches, wine harvests, and sea-level, and further experiments
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 13, Issue 6, pp. 665–687, September/October 1993)
- Robert G. Currie, T. Wyatt, Douglas P. O'Brien


Impact of lunar phase on the timing of global and latitudinal tropospheric temperature maxima
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 22, Number 23, pp. 3199-3202, 1995)
- Robert C. Balling Jr., Randall S. Cerveny


Influence of Lunar Phase on Daily Global Temperatures
(Science, Volume 267, Number 5203, pp. 1481-1483, March 1995)
- Robert C. Balling Jr., Randall S. Cerveny


Luni-solar 18.6- and solar cycle 10–11-year signals in Chinese dryness-wetness indices
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 15, Issue 5, pp. 497-515, May 1995)
- Robert G. Currie


Luni-solar and solar cycle signals in lake Saki varves and further experiments
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 15, Issue 8, pp. 893-917, August 1995)
- Robert G. Currie


Mn and Sc Signals in North Atlantic Tropical Cyclone Occurrence
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 16, Issue 4, pp. 427-439, April 1996)
- Robert G. Currie


Evidence for Luni - Solar Mn and Solar Cycle Sc Signals in Australian Rainfall Data
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 16, Issue 11, pp. 1243-1265, November 1996)
- Robert G. Currie, Robert G. Vines


Variance Contribution of Luni-Solar (Mn and Solar Cycle (Sc) Signals to Climate Data
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 16, Issue 12, pp. 1343-1364, December 1996)
- Robert G. Currie


Polar temperature sensitivity to lunar forcing?
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 24, Issue 1, pp. 29-32, January 1997)
- John A. Shaffer, Randall S. Cerveny, Robert C. Balling Jr.


A New Assessment of Possible Solar and Lunar Forcing of the Bidecadal Drought Rhythm in the Western United States
(Journal of Climate, Volume 10, Issue 6, pp. 1343-1356, June 1997)
- Edward R. Cook et al.


Lunar influence on diurnal temperature range
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 26, Issue 11, pp. 1605-1607, June 1999)
- Randall S. Cerveny, Robert C. Balling Jr.


Evidence of lunar phase influence on global surface air temperature
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 27, Issue 18, pp. 2969-2972, September 2000)
- Ebby K. Anyamba, Joel Susskind


The Moon and El Niño
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 28, Issue 1, pp. 25-28, January 2001)
- Randall S. Cerveny, John A. Shaffer


Luni-solar tidal influences on climate variability
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 22, Issue 12, pp. 1527-1542, October 2002)
- Norman C. Treloar


The cause of Barents Sea biomass dynamics
(Journal of Marine Systems, Volume 44, Issues 1–2, pp. 107–124, January 2004)
- Harald Yndestad


The impacts of the Luni-Solar oscillation on the Arctic oscillation
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Issue 22, November 2005)
- Renato Ramos da Silva, Roni Avissar


The influence of the lunar nodal cycle on Arctic climate
(ICES Journal of Marine Science, Volume 63, Number 3, pp. 401-420, 2006)
- Harald Yndestad


Impact of lunar cycle on the precipitation in India
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Issue 1, January 2006)
- Shouraseni Sen Roy


Possible explanation linking 18.6-year period nodal tidal cycle with bi-decadal variations of ocean and climate in the North Pacific
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Issue 8, April 2006)
- Ichiro Yasuda et al.


The 18.6-year lunar nodal cycle and surface temperature variability in the northeast Pacific
(Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, Volume 112, Issue C2, February 2007)
- Stewart M. McKinnell, William R. Crawford


Pacific bidecadal climate variability regulated by tidal mixing around the Kuril Islands
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 35, Issue 14, July 2008)
- Hiroyasu Hasumi, Ichiro Yasuda, Hiroaki Tatebe, Masahide Kimoto


Lunar nodal tide effects on variability of sea level, temperature, and salinity in the Faroe-Shetland Channel and the Barents Sea
(Deep Sea Research Part I, Volume 55, Issue 10, pp. 1201–1217, October 2008)
- Harald Yndestad, William R. Turrell, Vladimir Ozhigin


The 18.6-year period moon-tidal cycle in Pacific Decadal Oscillation reconstructed from tree-rings in western North America
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 36, Issue 5, March 2009)
- Ichiro Yasuda


The influence of long tides on ecosystem dynamics in the Barents Sea
(Deep Sea Research Part II, Volume 56, Issues 21–22, pp. 2108–2116, October 2009)
- Harald Yndestad


Monthly lunar declination extremes' influence on tropospheric circulation patterns
(Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, Volume 116, Issue D23, December 2011)
- Daniel S. Krahenbuhl, Matthew B. Pace, Randall S. Cerveny, Robert C. Balling Jr.


Effects of the 18.6-yr Modulation of Tidal Mixing on the North Pacific Bidecadal Climate Variability in a Coupled Climate Model
(Journal of Climate, Volume 25, Issue 21, pp. 7625-7642, November 2012)
- Yuki Tanaka, Ichiro Yasuda, Hiroyasu Hasumi, Hiroaki Tatebe, Satoshi Osafune


High-Frequency Cyclicity In the Mediterranean Messinian Evaporites: Evidence For Solar-Lunar Climate Forcing (PDF)
(Journal of Sedimentary Research, Volume 82, Number 12, pp. 991-1005, December 2012)
- Vinicio Manzi, Rocco Gennari, Stefano Lugli, Marco Roveri, Nicola Scafetta, B. Charlotte Schreiber


Are Global Mean Temperatures Significantly Affected by Long-Term Lunar Atmospheric Tides?
(Energy & Environment, Volume 24, Number 3-4, pp. 497-508, June 2013)
- Ian R. G. Wilson


Response of the Southern Annular Mode to tidal forcing and the bi-decadal rainfall cycle over subtropical southern Africa
(Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 2014)
- Johan Malherbe et al.


The 18.6-year nodal tidal cycle and the bi-decadal precipitation oscillation over the plains to the east of subtropical Andes, South America
(International Journal of Climatology, 2014)
- Eduardo Andres Agosta




Solar:

Solar-Climate Relationships in the Post-Pleistocene
(Science, Volume 171, Number 3977, pp. 1242-1243, March 1971)
- J. Roger Bray


Solar Magnetic Sector Structure: Relation to Circulation of the Earth's Atmosphere
(Science, Volume 180, Number 4082, pp. 185-186, April 1973)
- John M. Wilcox et al.


Solar Radiation Changes and the Weather
(Nature, Volume 245, Number 5426, pp. 443-446, October 1973)
- J. W. King


Influence of Solar Magnetic Sector Structure on Terrestrial Atmospheric Vorticity
(Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, Volume 31, Issue 2, pp. 581-588, March 1974)
- John M. Wilcox et al.


Sun-weather relationships
(Astronautics and Aeronautics, Volume 13, pp. 10-19, April 1975)
- J. W. King


Seasonal variation and magnitude of the solar sector structure-atmospheric vorticity effect
(Nature, Volume 255, Number 5509, pp. 539-540, June 1975)
- John M. Wilcox et al.


On the reality of a sun-weather effect (solar magnetic structure effect on vorticity)
(Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, Volume 33, pp. 1113-1116, June 1976)
- John M. Wilcox et al.


Variations in the Earth's Orbit: Pacemaker of the Ice Ages
(Science, Volume 194, Number 4270, pp. 1121-1132, December 1976)
- J. D. Hays, John Imbrie, N. J. Shackleton


Climate and the changing sun
(Climatic Change, Volume 1, Number 2, pp. 173-190, June 1977)
- John A. Eddy


Distribution of solar cycle signal in surface air temperature over North America
(Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, Volume 84, Issue C2, pp. 753-761, February 1979)
- Robert G. Currie


Variations in sunspot structure and climate
(Climatic Change, Volume 2, Number 1, pp. 79-92, March 1979)
- Douglas V. Hoyt


Interplanetary Magnetic Field Polarity and the Size of Low-Pressure Troughs Near 180°W Longitude
(Science, Volume 204, Number 4388, pp. 60-62, April 1979)
- John M. Wilcox et al.


Intensity of tropospheric circulation associated with solar magnetic sector boundary transits
(Journal of Atmospheric and Terrestrial Physics, Volume 41, Issue 6, pp. 657-659, June 1979)
- John M. Wilcox et al.


Swinging sun, 79‐year cycle, and climatic change (PDF)
(Journal of Interdisiplinary Cycle Research, Volume 12, Issue 1, pp. 3-19, 1981)
- Theodor Landscheidt


The solar constant and climate
(Solar Physics, Volume 89, Issue 1, pp. 215-222, November 1983)
- K. Y. Kondratyev, G. A. Nikolsky


Terrestrial, Solar and Galactic Origin of the Earth's Geophysical Variables (PDF)
(Geografiska Annaler: Series A, Physical Geography, Volume 66, Number 1/2, pp. 1-9, 1984)
- Nils-Axel Morner


Sunspots, the QBO, and the stratospheric temperature in the north polar region
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 14, Number 5, pp. 535-537, May 1987)
- Karin Labitzke


Influence of solar variability on global sea surface temperatures
(Nature, Volume 329, Number 6135, pp. 142-143, September 1987)
- George C. Reid


Solar rotation, impulses of the torque in the Sun's motion, and climatic variation
(Climatic Change, Volume 12, Number 3, pp. 265-295, June 1988)
- Theodor Landscheidt


A generalized theory of sun-climate/weather link and climatic change (PDF)
(Il Nuovo Cimento C, Volume 12, Number 5, pp. 597-611, September 1989)
- Ernest C. Njau


Evidence for long-term brightness changes of solar-type stars
(Nature, Volume 348, Number 6301, pp. 520-523, December 1990)
- Sallie Baliunas, Robert Jastrow


Sun-controlled spatial and time-dependent cycles in the climatic/weather system
(Il Nuovo Cimento C, Volume 15, Number 1, pp. 17-23, January 1991)
- Ernest C. Njau


Solar total irradiance variation and the global sea surface temperature record
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 96, Number D2, pp. 2835-2844, February 1991)
- George C. Reid


Length of the Solar Cycle: An Indicator of Solar Activity Closely Associated with Climate (PDF)
(Science, Volume 254, Number 5032, pp. 698-700, November 1991)
- Eigil Friis-Christensen, K. Lassen


A possible long-term solar impact on air temperature in relation to solar motion
(Studia Geophysica et Geodaetica, Volume 36, Issue 4, pp. 338-348, December 1992)
- Ivanka Charvatova, Jaroslav Strestik


Rome rainfall and sunspot numbers
(Journal of Atmospheric and Terrestrial Physics, Volume 55, Issue 2, pp. 155-164, February 1993)
- R. G. Thomas


Relationships between relative sunspot numbers and air temperature
(Meteorologische Zeitschrift. Volume 2, Number 3, pp. 121-126, June 1993)
- Werner Mende, Rita Stellmacher


A discussion of plausible solar irradiance variations, 1700-1992 (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 98, Number A11, pp. 18,895-18,906, November 1993)
- Douglas V. Hoyt, Kenneth H. Schatten


Evidence on the climate impact of solar variations
(Energy, Volume 18, Issue 12, pp. 1285-1295, December 1993)
- Sallie Baliunas, Robert Jastrow


Solar activity variations and global temperature
(Energy, Volume 18, Issue 12, pp. 1273-1284, December 1993)
- Eigil Friis-Christensen


Solar history and human affairs (PDF)
(Human Ecology, Volume 22, Number 1, pp. 23-35, march 1994)
- John A. Eddy


Maximum and minimum temperatures at armagh observatory, 1844-1992, and the length of the sunspot cycle (PDF)
(Solar Physics, Volume 152, Number 1, pp. 35-42, June 1994)
- C. J. Butler


The link between the solar dynamo and climate - The evidence from a long mean air temperature series from Northern Ireland
(Irish Astronomical Journal, Volume 21, Number 3-4, pp. 251-254, September 1994)
- C. J. Butler, D. J. Johnston


Long-term changes of the surface air temperature in relation to solar inertial motion
(Climatic Change, Volume 29, Issue 3, pp. 333-352, March 1995)
- Ivanka Charvatova, Jaroslav Strestik


Variability of the solar cycle length during the past five centuries and the apparent association with terrestrial climate
(Journal of Atmospheric and Terrestrial Physics, Volume 57, Issue 8, pp. 835-845, July 1995)
- K. Lassen, Eigil Friis-Christensen


On solar forcing of Holocene climate: evidence from Scandinavia
(The Holocene, Volume 6, Number 3, pp. 359-365, 1996)
- Wibjorn Karlen, Johan Kuylenstierna


Time-Delayed Response of the Solar Total Irradiance Variation to Long-Term Solar Magnetic Cycle Amplitude Modulation as Inferred by Sunspot Relative Number and Isotope Data of 10Be in the Greenland Ice Core and Land Air Temperature Variation of the Earth
(Proceedings of the Japan Academy, Series B, Volume 72, Number 10, pp. 197-201, 1996)
- Hirokazu Yoshimura


Comparison of proxy records of climate change and solar forcing
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 23, Number 4, pp. 359-362, February 1996)
- Thomas J. Crowley et al.


Solar variability and ring widths in fossil trees
(Il Nuovo Cimento C, Volume 19, Number 4, July 1996)
- S. Cecchini et al.


A provisional long mean air temperature series for Armagh observatory (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Terrestrial Physics, Volume 58, Issue 15, pp. 1657-1672, November 1996)
- C. J. Butler, D. J. Johnston


Inference of Solar Irradiance Variability from Terrestrial Temperature Changes, 1880--1993: an Astrophysical Application of the Sun-Climate Connection
(The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 472, pp. 891-902, December 1996)
- Willie H. Soon, Eric S. Posmentier, Sallie L. Baliunas


Decadal Components of the Solar Total Irradiance and Terrestrial Climatic Variations as Seen in the Land Air Temperature Anomaly and Lake Victoria Water Level Changes
(Proceedings of the Japan Academy, Series B, Volume 73, Number 7, pp. 120-125, 1997)
- Hirokazu Yoshimura


Solar-terrestrial and climatic phenomena in relation to solar inertial motion
(Surveys in Geophysics, Volume 18, Issue 2-3, pp. 131-146, May 1997)
- I. Charvatova


The signal of the 11-year sunspot cycle in the upper troposphere-lower stratosphere
(Space Science Reviews, Volume 80, Issue 3-4, pp. 393-410, May 1997)
- K. Labitzke, H. van Loon


Existence and possible causes of some large-scale changes in temperature patterns
(Renewable Energy, Volume 11, Issue 4, pp. 401-408, August 1997)
- Ernest C. Njau


What do we really know about the Sun-climate connection?
(Advances in Space Research, Volume 20, Issue 4-5, pp. 913-921, September 1997)
- Eigil Friis-Christensen, Henrik Svensmark


Solar Forcing of Global Climate Change Since The Mid-17th Century
(Climatic Change, Volume 37, Number 2, pp. 391-405, October 1997)
- George C. Reid


Solar variability and climate change: Geomagnetic aa index and global surface temperature
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 25, Number 7, pp. 1035-1038, January 1998)
- E. W. Cliver et al.


Role of Time-Delay Concept in Understanding Mechanism of Total Solar Irradiance Variation and its Effect on the Climate of the Earth
(Solar Physics, Volume 177, Issue 1-2, pp. 329-342, January 1998)
- Hirokazu Yoshimura


Amplitude-modulating periodicities in global and regional heat/temperature variations
(Renewable Energy, Volume 13, Issue 3, pp. 295-303, March 1998)
- Ernest C. Njau


A statistical study of the relationship between the solar cycle length and tree-ring index values
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 60, Issue 18, pp. 1711-1718, December 1998)
- Keqian Zhou, C. J. Butler


Orbital Controls on the El Nino/Southern Oscillation and the Tropical Climate
(Paleoceanography, Volume 14, Number 4, pp. 441-456, 1999)
- A. C. Clement et al.


Palaeoenvironmental evidence for solar forcing of Holocene climate: linkages to solar science
(Progress in Physical Geography, Volume 23, Number 2, pp. 181-204, 1999)
- Frank M. Chambers et al.


Solar variability and its implications for the human environment
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 61, Issues 1-2, pp. 3-14, January 1999)
- George C. Reid


Solar Cycle Variability, Ozone, and Climate
(Science, Volume 284, Number 5412, pp. 305-308, April 1999)
- Drew Shindell et al.


A doubling of the Sun's coronal magnetic field during the past 100 years
(Nature, Volume 399, Number 6735, pp. 437-439, June 1999)
- Mike Lockwood et al.


Possible geomagnetic activity effects on weather
(Annales Geophysicae, Volume 17, Number 7, pp. 925-932, July 1999)
- J. Bochnicek et al.


Some new relationships between temperature variations and sunspot cycles—1. Long-period variations
(Renewable Energy, Volume 18, Issue 1, pp. 25-33, September 1999)
- Ernest C. Njau


Some causes of rapid changes in temperature patterns
(Renewable Energy, Volume 18, Issue 2, pp. 157-166, October 1999)
- Ernest C. Njau


Connection between the Solar Cycle and the QBO: The Missing Link (PDF)
(Journal of Climate, Volume 13, Issue 2, pp. 328-338, January 2000)
- Murry Salby, Patrick Callaghan


Variations of solar coronal hole area and terrestrial lower tropospheric air temperature from 1979 to mid-1998: astronomical forcings of change in earth's climate?
(New Astronomy, Volume 4, Issue 8, pp. 563-579, January 2000)
- Willie H. Soon, Sallie L Baliunas, Eric S. Posmentier, P. Okeke


Climate hypersensitivity to solar forcing? (PDF)
(Annales Geophysicae, Volume 18, Number 5, pp. 583-588, May 2000)
- Willie H. Soon, Eric S. Posmentier, Sallie L Baliunas


Sun-Weather/Climate Relationships: A Review (Part I) (PDF)
(Proceedings of the Indian National Science Academy A, Volume 66, Number 3/4, pp. 415-441, May & July 2000)
- Ernest C. Njau


Sun-Weather/Climate Relationships: A Review (Part II) (PDF)
(Proceedings of the Indian National Science Academy A, Volume 66, Number 5, pp. 451-466, September 2000)
- Ernest C. Njau


Geophysical, archaeological, and historical evidence support a solar-output model for climate change
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 97, Number 23, pp. 12433-12438, November 2000)
- Charles A. Perry, Kenneth J. Hsu


Solar Variability and the Earth's Climate: Introduction and Overview
(Space Science Reviews, Volume 94, Issue 1-2, pp. 1-11, November 2000)
- George C. Reid


A verification of UK gale forecasts by the 'solar weather technique': October 1995-September 1997
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 63, Issue 1, pp. 29-34, January 2001)
- Dennis Wheeler


The Sun-Earth Connection in Time Scales from Years to Decades and Centuries
(Space Science Reviews, Volume 95, Issue 1-2, pp. 625-637, January 2001)
- T. I. Pulkkinen, H. Nevanlinna, P. J. Pulkkinen, M. Lockwood


Strong coherence between solar variability and the monsoon in Oman between 9 and 6 kyr ago (PDF)
(Nature, Volume 411, Number 6835, pp. 290-293, May 2001)
- U. Neff et al.


The cause-and-effect relationship of solar cycle length and the Northern Hemisphere air surface temperature
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 106, Number A8, pp. 15635-15642, August 2001)
- Richard Reichel, Peter Thejll, Knud Lassen


Global Temperature Forced by Solar Irradiation and Greenhouse Gases?
(Ambio, Volume 30, Number 6, pp. 349-350, September 2001)
- Wibjorn Karlen


Persistent Solar Influence on North Atlantic Climate During the Holocene
(Science, Volume 294, Number 5549, pp. 2130-2136, December 2001)
- Gerard Bond et al.


Long-term variations and interrelations of ENSO, NAO and solar activity
(Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, Volume 27, Issue 6-8, pp. 441-448, 2002)
- B. Kirov, K. Georgieva


Manifestation of the Long-Term Variations in Solar Activity and Their Relation to the ~210-Year Solar Cycle
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 42, Number 2, pp. 137-144, 2002)
- S. S. Vasiliev, V. A. Dergachev, O. M. Raspopov


Evidence of Solar Variation in Tree-Ring-Based Climate Reconstructions
(Solar Physics, Volume 205, Number 2, pp. 403-417, February 2002)
- M. G. Ogurtsov et al.


Evidence for solar forcing on the Indian monsoon during the last millennium
(Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 198, Issues 3-4, pp. 521-527, May 2002)
- Rajesh Agnihotri, Koushik Dutta, Ravi Bhushan, B. L. K. Somayajulu


Solar correlates of Southern Hemisphere mid-latitude climate variability
(International Journal of Climatology, Volume 22, Issue 8, pp. 901-915, May 2002)
- Ronald E. Thresher


Variations in solar magnetic activity during the last 200 000 years: is there a Sun-climate connection?
(Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 199, Issue 3-4, pp. 459-472, June 2002)
- Mukul Sharma


Climate sensitivity of the Earth to solar irradiance (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 29, Number 16, pp. 33-1, August 2002)
- David H. Douglass, B. David Clader


Will We Face Global Warming in the Nearest Future?
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 43, pp. 124-127, August 2002)
- V. S. Bashkirtsev, G. P. Mashnich


Long-Period Cycles of the Sun's Activity Recorded in Direct Solar Data and Proxies
(Solar Physics, Volume 211, Issue 1-2, December 2002)
- M. G. Ogurtsov et al.


Solar influence on the spatial structure of the NAO during the winter 1900-1999
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 30, Number 4, pp. 24-1, February 2003)
- Kunihiko Kodera


Solar Flare Intermittency and the Earth’s Temperature Anomalies (PDF)
(Physical Review Letters, Volume 90, Number 24, June 2003)
- Nicola Scafetta, Bruce J. West


Cyclic Variation and Solar Forcing of Holocene Climate in the Alaskan Subarctic (PDF)
(Science, Volume 301, Number 5641, pp. 1890-1893, September 2003)
- Feng Sheng Hu et al.


Millennium Scale Sunspot Reconstruction: Evidence For an Unusually Active Sun Since the 1940's (PDF)
(Physical Review Letters, Volume 91, Issue 21, November 2003)
- Ilya G. Usoskin et al.


Solar turbulence in earth's global and regional temperature anomalies (PDF)
(Physical Review E, Volume 69, Number 2, February 2004)
- Nicola Scafetta et al.


Periodicities between 6 and 16 years in surface air temperature in possible relation to solar inertial motion
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 66, Issues 3-4, pp. 219-227, February-March 2004)
- Ivanka Charvatova, Jaroslav Strestik


Geomagnetic activity forcing of the Northern Annular Mode via the stratosphere (PDF)
(Annales Geophysicae, Volume 22, Issue 3, pp. 725-731, March 2004)
- D. R. Palamara, E. A. Bryant


Temperature response of Earth to the annual solar irradiance cycle (PDF)
(Physics Letters A, Volume 323, Issues 3-4, pp. 315-322, March 2004)
- David H. Douglass, Eric G. Blackman, Robert S. Knox


Century-scale solar variability and Alaskan temperature change over the past millennium
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Number 15, August 2004)
- Gregory C. Wiles et al.


Solar Cycle Signal in Geomagnetic Activity and Climate
(Solar Physics, Volume 224, Issue 1-2, pp. 465-471, October 2004)
- Dmitri I. Ponyavin


Eleven-year solar cycle signal throughout the lower atmosphere (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 109, Issue D21, November 2004)
- K. Coughlin, K. K. Tung


Late Holocene sedimentary response to solar and cosmic ray activity influenced climate variability in the NE Pacific (PDF)
(Sedimentary Geology, Volume 172, Issues 1-2, pp. 67-84, November 2004)
- R. Timothy Patterson et al.


A decadal solar effect in the tropics in July-August (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 66, Issue 18, pp. 1767-1778, December 2004)
- Harry van Loona et al.


Variation of spring climate in lower‐middle Yangtse River Valley and its relation with solar‐cycle length
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 21, Number 24, pp. 2693-2696, December 2004)
- Sultan Hameed, Gaofa Gong


Cyclone regeneration in the North Atlantic intensified by energetic solar proton events
(Advances in Space Research, Volume 35, Issue 3, pp. 470-475, 2005)
- S. Veretenenko, P. Thejll


Long-term variations in the correlation between solar activity and climate (PDF)
(Memorie della Società Astronomica Italiana, Volume 76, pp. 965-968, 2005)
- K. Georgieva, B. Kirov, C. Bianchi


Once again about global warming and solar activity (PDF)
(Memorie della Società Astronomica Italiana, Volume 76, pp. 969-972, 2005)
- K. Georgieva, B. Kirov, C. Bianchi


Solar forcing of the polar atmosphere (PDF)
(Annals of Glaciology, Volume 41, Issue 1, pp. 147-154, 2005)
- Andrew Mayewski et al.


Linkages Between Solar Activity and Climatic Responses
(Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 2, pp. 239-254, March 2005)
- William J. R. Alexander et al.


Celestial Climate Driver: A Perspective from Four Billion Years of the Carbon Cycle (PDF)
(Geoscience Canada, Volume 32, Number 1, March 2005)
- Jan Veizer


Do Satellites Detect Trends in Surface Solar Radiation?
(Science, Volume 308, Issue 5723, pp. 850-854, May 2005)
- R. T. Pinker et al.


The influence of the 11 yr solar cycle on the interannual-centennial climate variability
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 67, Issues 8-9, pp. 793-805, May-June 2005)
- Hengyi Weng


A new pathway for communicating the 11-year solar cycle signal to the QBO
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Number 18, September 2005)
- Eugene C. Cordero, Terrence R. Nathan


Estimated solar contribution to the global surface warming using the ACRIM TSI satellite composite (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Number 18, September 2005)
- Nicola Scafetta, Bruce J. West


* Reply to comment by J. L. Lean on "Estimated solar contribution to the global surface warming using the ACRIM TSI satellite composite" (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Number 15, August 2006)
- Nicola Scafetta, Bruce J. West


Solar Forcing of Climate. 1: Solar Variability
(Space Science Reviews, Volume 120, Issue 3-4, pp. 197-241, October 2005)
- C. De Jager


Solar Forcing of Climate. 2: Evidence from the Past
(Space Science Reviews, Volume 120, Issue 3-4, pp. 243-286, October 2005)
- Gerard J. M. Versteegh


Regional sun-climate interaction
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 67, Issue 16, pp. 1573-1579, November 2005)
- A. Kilcik


A mechanism for sun-climate connection (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 32, Number 23, December 2005)
- Sultan Hameed, Jae N. Lee


Possible mechanisms for the influence of heliogeophysical activity on the biosphere and the weather
(Journal of Optical Technology, Volume 73, Issue 4, pp. 281-285, 2006)
- S. V. Avakyan, N. A. Voronin


80-120 yr Long-term solar induced effects on the earth, past and predictions
(Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, Volume 31, Issues 1-3, pp. 113-122, 2006)
- Shahinaz Moustafa Yousef


Short and longer-term planetary effects on Sun and Earth (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 17, Number 1, pp. 63-73, January 2006)
- Kenneth W. Dickman


Solar cycles 24 and 25 and predicted climate response (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 17, Number 1, pp. 29-35, January 2006)
- David C. Archibald


Phenomenological solar contribution to the 1900-2000 global surface warming (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Number 5, March 2006)
- Nicola Scafetta, Bruce J. West


Solar Activity and Global Warming Revisited (PDF)
(Sun and Geosphere, Volume 1, Number 1, pp. 12-16, March 2006)
- K. Georgieva, B. Kirov


Sunspots, the QBO and the stratosphere in the North Polar Region - 20 years later
(Meteorologische Zeitschrift, Volume 15, Number 3, pp. 355-363, June 2006)
- Karin Labitzke et al.


Coherence between solar activity and the East Asian winter monsoon variability in the past 8000 years from Yangtze River-derived mud in the East China Sea (PDF)
(Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, Volume 237, Issues 2-4, pp. 293-304, August 2006)
- Muhong Chen et al.


Phenomenological solar signature in 400 years of reconstructed Northern Hemisphere temperature record (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Number 17, September 2006)
- Nicola Scafetta, Bruce J. West


Imprint of Galactic dynamics on Earth's climate
(Astronomical Notes, Volume 327, Issue 9, pp. 866-870, October 2006)
- Henrik Svensmark


Evidence of the solar cycle in the tropical troposphere
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 111, Issue D21, November 2006)
- Murry Salby, Patrick Callaghan


Is solar variability reflected in the Nile River?
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 111, Issue D21, November 2006)
- Alexander Ruzmaikin, Joan Feynman, Yuk L. Yung


In defense of Milankovitch (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Number 24, December 2006)
- Gerard Roe


Solar Variability Over the Past Several Millennia (PDF)
(Space Science Reviews, Volume 125, Issue 1-4, pp. 67-79, December 2006)
- J. Beer et al.


Regional tropospheric responses to long-term solar activity variations
(Advances in Space Research, Volume 40, Issue 7, pp. 1167-1172, 2007)
- O. M. Raspopov et al.


Rhodes Fairbridge and the idea that the solar system regulates the Earth’s climate (PDF)
(Journal of Coastal Research, Special Issue 50, pp. 955-968, 2007)
- Richard Mackey


Sunspots, the QBO, and the Stratosphere in the North Polar Region: An Update
(Advances in Global Change Research, Volume 33, pp. 347-357, 2007)
- Karin Labitzke et al.


Solar and climate signal records in tree ring width from Chile (AD 1587-1994)
(Planetary and Space Science, Volume 55, Issues 1-2, pp. 158-164, January 2007)
- Nivaor Rodolfo Rigozoa et al.


Role of solar activity in formation of the anomalous El Nino current
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 47, Number 1, pp. 94-100, February 2007)
- V. Ya. Vovk, L. V. Egorova


Has solar variability caused climate change that affected human culture?
(Advances in Space Research, Volume 40, Issue 7, pp. 1173-1180, March 2007)
- Joan Feynmana


The 60-year solar modulation of global air temperature: the Earth’s rotation and atmospheric circulation connection
(Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 88, Issue 3-4, March 2007)
- Adriano Mazzarella


Suggestive correlations between the brightness of Neptune, solar variability, and Earth's temperature (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 34, Number 8, April 2007)
- H. B. Hammel, G. W. Lockwood


The Influence of the Solar Cycle and QBO on the Late-Winter Stratospheric Polar Vortex
(Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, Volume 64, Issue 4, pp. 1267-1283, April 2007)
- Charles D. Camp, Ka-Kit Tung


Linkages between solar activity, climate predictability and water resource development (PDF)
(Journal of the South African Institution of Civil Engineering, Volume 49, Number 2, pp. 32-44, June 2007)
- William J. R. Alexander et al.


Surface warming by the solar cycle as revealed by the composite mean difference projection (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 34, Number 14, July 2007)
- Charles D. Camp, Ka Kit Tung


Climate cyclicity in late Holocene anoxic marine sediments from the Seymour-Belize Inlet Complex (PDF)
(Marine Geology, Volume 242, Issues 1-3, pp. 123-140, August 2007)
- R. Timothy Patterson et al.


Shortwave forcing of the Earth's climate: Modern and historical variations in the Sun's irradiance and the Earth's reflectance (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 69, Issue 13, pp. 1556-1568, September 2007)
- P. R. Goode, E. Palle


Phenomenological reconstructions of the solar signature in the Northern Hemisphere surface temperature records since 1600 (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 112, Issue D24, November 2007)
- Nicola Scafetta, Bruce J. West


A History of Solar Activity over Millennia (PDF)
(Living Reviews of Solar Physics, Volume 5, 2008)
- Ilya G. Usoskin


Temperature variations at Lake Qinghai on decadal scales and the possible relation to solar activities
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 70, Issue 1, pp. 138-144, January 2008)
- Hai Xu, Xiaoyan Liu, Zhaohua Hou


Sun-Climate Complexity Linking (PDF)
(Physical Review Letters, Volume 100, Issue 8, February 2008)
- Bruce J. West, P. Grigolini


The influence of the de Vries (not, vert, similar 200-year) solar cycle on climate variations: Results from the Central Asian Mountains and their global link (PDF)
(Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, Volume 259, Issue 1, pp. 6-16, March 2008)
- O. M. Raspopov et al.


View of Climate Changes Based on the Wavelet Analysis of Solar Intensity
(Latvian Journal of Physics and Technical Sciences, Volume 45, Issue 1, pp. 3-11, March 2008)
- J. Barkans, D. Zalostiba


Impact of variations in solar activity on hydrological decadal patterns in northern Italy
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 113, Issue D12, June 2008)
- D. Zanchettin et al.


Evidence for a solar signature in 20th-century temperature data from the USA and Europe (PDF)
(Comptes Rendus Geosciences, Volume 340, Issue 7, pp. 421-430, July 2008)
- Jean-Louis Le Mouel et al.


Solar Forcing of Changes in Atmospheric Circulation, Earth's Rotation and Climate (PDF)
(The Open Atmospheric Science Journal, Volume 2, Issue 1, pp. 181-184, August 2008)
- Adriano Mazzarella


Solar proton events and evolution of cyclones in the North Atlantic
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 48, Issue 4, pp. 518-528, August 2008)
- S. V. Veretenenko, P. Tejll


Solar activity and its influence on climate (PDF)
(Netherlands Journal of Geosciences, Volume 87, Issue 3, pp. 207-213, September 2008)
- C. de Jager


Non-linear alignment of El Nino to the 11-yr solar cycle
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 35, Number 19, October 2008)
- Warren B. White, Zhengyu Liu


Solar Forcing of the Stream Flow of a Continental Scale South American River (PDF)
(Physical Review Letters, Volume 101, Issue 16, October 2008)
- Pablo J. D. Mauas et. al.


Using the oceans as a calorimeter to quantify the solar radiative forcing (PDF)
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 113, Issue A11, November 2008)
- Nir J. Shaviv


Solar Cycle 24: Expectations and Implications (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 1-2, pp. 1-10, January 2009)
- David C. Archibald


Can We Predict the Next Indian Mega-Famine?
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 1-2, pp. 11-24, January 2009)
- Ian R. G. Wilson


The Sun's Role in Regulating the Earth's Climate Dynamics
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 1-2, pp. 25-73, January 2009)
- Richard Mackey


Earth's Radiative Equilibrium in the Solar Irradiance (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 1-2, pp. 85-95, January 2009)
- Martin Hertzberg


Sun-Climate Linkage Now Confirmed (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 1-2, pp. 123-130, January 2009)
- Adriano Mazzarella


Understanding Solar Behaviour and its Influence on Climate
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 1-2, pp. 145-159, January 2009)
- Timo Niroma


Episodes of relative global warming (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 71, Issue 2, pp. 194-198, February 2009)
- C. de Jager, S. Duhau


Orbital forcing and role of the latitudinal insolation/temperature gradient
(Climate Dynamics, Volume 32, Issue 2-3, pp. 143-165, February 2009)
- Basil A. S. Davis, Simon Brewer


ACRIM-gap and TSI trend issue resolved using a surface magnetic flux TSI proxy model (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 36, Number 5, March 2009)
- Nicola Scafetta, Richard C. Willson


* Supporting material document for: ACRIM-gap and TSI trend issue resolved using a surface magnetic flux TSI proxy model (PDF)
(Supplement, 2009)
- Nicola Scafetta, Richard C. Willson


ARIMA representation for daily solar irradiance and surface air temperature time series (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 71, Issues 8-9, pp. 841-847, June 2009)
- Olavi Karner


Phase-coherent oscillatory modes in solar and geomagnetic activity and climate variability
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 71, Issues 8-9, pp. 923-930, June 2009)
- Milan Palus, Dagmar Novotna


Evidence for solar forcing in variability of temperatures and pressures in Europe
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 71, Issue 12, pp. 1309-1321, August 2009)
- Jean-Louis Le Mouel et al.


Evidence for Obliquity Forcing of Glacial Termination II
(Science, Volume 325, Issue 5947, pp. 1527-1531, September 2009)
- R. N. Drysdale et al.


Possible orographic and solar controls of Late Holocene centennial-scale moisture oscillations in the northeastern Tibetan Plateau (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 36, Number 21, November 2009)
- Cheng Zhao et al.


Comets and climate
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 71, Issues 17-18, pp. 1766-1770, December 2009)
- Antonio Zecca, Luca Chiari


Empirical analysis of the solar contribution to global mean air surface temperature change (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 71, Issues 17-18, pp. 1916-1923, December 2009)
- Nicola Scafetta


Long-term solar activity as a controlling factor for global warming in the 20th century
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 49, Number 8, pp. 1271-1274, December 2009)
- V. A. Dergachev, O. M. Raspopov


Quasisecular cyclicity in the climate of the Earth’s Northern Hemisphere and its possible relation to solar activity variations
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 49, Number 7, pp. 1056-1062, December 2009)
- M. G. Ogurtsov et al.


A solar pattern in the longest temperature series from three stations in Europe
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 72, Issue 1, pp. 62-76, January 2010)
- Jean-Louis Le Mouel, Vladimir Kossobokov, Vincent Courtillot


Evolution of seasonal temperature disturbances and solar forcing in the US North Pacific
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 72, Issue 1, pp. 83-89, January 2010)
- Vincent Courtillot, Jean-Louis Le Mouel, E. Blanter, M. Shnirman


Possible manifestation of nonlinear effects when solar activity affects climate changes
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 50, Number 1, pp. 15-20, February 2010)
- M. G. Ogurtsov et al.


Solar activity and climatic variability in the time interval from 10 to 250 Ma ago
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 50, Number 2, pp. 141-152, April 2010)
- O. M. Raspopov et al.


A statistically significant signature of multi-decadal solar activity changes in atmospheric temperatures at three European stations
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 72, Issues 7-8, pp. 595-606, May 2010)
- Vladimir Kossobokov, Jean-Louis Le Mouel and Vincent Courtillot


Difference in the air temperatures between the years of solar activity maximum and minimum and its mechanism
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 50, Number 3, pp. 375-382, June 2010)
- A. I. Laptukhov, V. A. Laptukhov


Solar Minima, Earth's rotation and Little Ice Ages in the past and in the future: The North Atlantic-European case
(Global and Planetary Change, Volume 72, Issue 4, pp. 282-293, July 2010)
- Nils-Axel Morner


Quantifying and specifying the solar influence on terrestrial surface temperature (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 72, Issue 13, pp. 926-937, August 2010)
- C. de Jager, S. Duhau, B. van Geel


Empirical evidence for a celestial origin of the climate oscillations and its implications (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 72, Issue 13, pp. 951-970, August 2010)
- Nicola Scafetta


* Comment on "The influence of planetary attractions on the solar tachocline" by Callebaut, de Jager and Duhau (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 102, pp. 368–371, September 2013)
- Nicola Scafetta et al.


* Global temperatures and sunspot numbers. Are they related? Yes, but non linearly. A reply to Gil-Alana et al. (2014)
(Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications, Volume 413, pp. 329-342, November 2014)
- Nicola Scafetta et al.


Solar forcing of the semi-annual variation of length-of-day
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 37, Number 15, August 2010)
- Jean-Louis Le Mouel et al.


The Influence of the Atmospheric Transmission for the Solar Radiation and Earth’s Surface Radiation on the Earth’s Climate (PDF)
(Journal of Geographic Information System, Volume 2, Number 4, pp. 194-200, October 2010)
- Habibullo I. Abdussamatov, Alexander I. Bogoyavlenskii, Sergey I. Khankov, Yevgeniy V. Lapovok


Dynamical Response of the Tropical Pacific Ocean to Solar Forcing During the Early Holocene
(Science, Volume 330, Number 6009, pp. 1378-1381, December 2010)
- Thomas M. Marchitto et al.


Latitude dependency of solar flare index-temperature relation occuring over middle and high latitudes of Atlantic-Eurasian region
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 72, Issue 18, pp. 1379-1386, December 2010)
- A. Kilcik et al.


Solar Activity and Svalbard Temperatures
(Advances in Meteorology, Volume 2011, pp. 1-8, 2011)
- Jan-Erik Solheim, Kjell Stordahl, Ole Humlum3


Natural climatic oscillations driven by solar activity
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 51, Number 1, pp. 131-138, February 2011)
- A. A. Gusev


Variations in tree ring stable isotope records from northern Finland and their possible connection to solar activity
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 73, Issues 2-3, pp. 383-387, February 2011)
- Maxim Ogurtsov


Variations in climate parameters at time intervals from hundreds to tens of millions of years in the past and its relation to solar activity
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 73, Issues 2-3, pp. 388-399, February 2011)
- O. M. Raspopov et. al.


A new approach to the long-term reconstruction of the solar irradiance leads to large historical solar forcing (PDF)
(Astronomy & Astrophysics, Volume 529, A67, April 2011)
- A. I. Shapiro et al.


Possible impact of interplanetary and interstellar dust fluxes on the Earth’s climate
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 51, Number 2, pp. 275-283, April 2011)
- M. G. Ogurtsov, O. M. Raspopov


A unified approach to orbital, solar, and lunar forcing based on the Earth’s latitudinal insolation/temperature gradient
(Quaternary Science Reviews, Volume 30, Issues 15–16, pp. 1861-1874, July 2011)
- Basil A. S. Davis, Simon Brewer


Climate patterns in north central China during the last 1800 yr and their possible driving force (PDF)
(Climate of the Past, Volume 7, Issue 3, pp. 685-692, July 2011)
- L. Tan et al.


Sun-earth relationship inferred by tree growth rings in conifers from Severiano De Almeida, Southern Brazil
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 73, Issues 11-12, pp. 1587-1593, July 2011)
- A. Prestes et al.


Evidence of solar signals in tree rings of Smith fir from Sygera Mountain in southeast Tibet (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 73, Issue 13, pp. 1959-1966, August 2011)
- Xiaochun Wang, Qi-Bin Zhang


Solar-geomagnetic activity influence on Earth's climate
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 73, Issue 13, pp. 1607-1615, August 2011)
- S. Mufti, G.N. Shah


Temporal derivative of Total Solar Irradiance and anomalous Indian summer monsoon: An empirical evidence for a Sun-climate connection
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 73, Issue 13, pp. 1980-1987, August 2011)
- Rajesh Agnihotri, Koushik Dutta, Willie Soon


Variation in surface air temperature of China during the 20th century
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 73, Issue 16, pp. 2331-2344, October 2011)
- Willie Soon, Koushik Dutta, David R. Legates, Victor Velasco, WeiJia Zhang


Solar Activity and Svalbard Temperatures (PDF)
(Advances in Meteorology, Volume 2011, pp. 1-8, December 2011)
- Jan-Erik Solheim et al.


The Pacific sea surface temperature (PDF)
(Physics Letters A, Volume 376, Issue 2, pp. 128-135, December 2011)
- David H. Douglass


A shared frequency set between the historical mid-latitude aurora records and the global surface temperature (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 74, pp. 145-163, January 2012)
- Nicola Scafetta


Evidences for a quasi 60-year North Atlantic Oscillation since 1700 and its meaning for global climate change (PDF)
(Theoretical and Applied Climatology, Volume 107, Issue 3-4, pp. 599-609, February 2012)
- Adriano Mazzarella, Nicola Scafetta


Hydroclimate of the northeastern United States is highly sensitive to solar forcing (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 39, February 2012)
- Jonathan E. Nichols, Yongsong Huang


Bicentennial Decrease of the Total Solar Irradiance Leads to Unbalanced Thermal Budget of the Earth and the Little Ice Age
(Applied Physics Research, Volume 4, Issue 1, pp. 178-184, February 2012)
- Habibullo I. Abdussamatov


High-resolution sea surface reconstructions off Cape Hatteras over the last 10 ka
(Paleoceanography, Volume 27, Issue 1, March 2012)
- Caroline Cleroux et al.


Variability of rainfall and temperature (1912-2008) parameters measured from Santa Maria (29°41′S, 53°48′W) and their connections with ENSO and solar activity
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 77, pp. 152-160, March 2012)
- P. H. Rampelotto et al.


Bicentennial decrease of the solar constant leads to the Earth’s unbalanced heat budget and deep climate cooling
(Kinematics and Physics of Celestial Bodies, Volume 28, Number 2, pp. 62-68, April 2012)
- Kh. I. Abdusamatov


Tree ring based precipitation reconstruction in the south slope of the middle Qilian Mountains, northeastern Tibetan Plateau, over the last millennium
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 117, Issue D8, April 2012)
- Junyan Sun, Yu Liu


Trends in sunspots and North Atlantic sea level pressure
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 117, Issue D7, April 2012)
- Harry van Loon et al.


Strong evidence for the influence of solar cycles on a Late Miocene lake system revealed by biotic and abiotic proxies
(Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, Volumes 329-330, pp. 124-136, April 2012)
- A. K. Kern


Assessment of the relationship between the combined solar cycle/ENSO forcings and the tropopause temperature
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 80, pp. 21-27, May 2012)
- Alfred M. Powell Jr., Jianjun Xu


Testing an Astronomically Based Decadal-Scale Empirical Harmonic Climate Model vs, the IPCC (2007) General Circulation Models (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 80, pp. 124-137, May 2012)
- Nicola Scafetta


The long sunspot cycle 23 predicts a significant temperature decrease in cycle 24
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 80, pp. 267-284, May 2012)
- Jan-Erik Solheim, Kjell Stordahl, Ole Humlum


Multi-scale harmonic model for solar and climate cyclical variation throughout the Holocene based on Jupiter-Saturn tidal frequencies plus the 11-year solar dynamo cycle (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 80, pp. 296-311, May 2012)
- Nicola Scafetta


Does the Sun work as a nuclear fusion amplifier of planetary tidal forcing? A proposal for a physical mechanism based on the mass-luminosity relation (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volumes 81-82, pp. 27-40, June 2012)
- Nicola Scafetta


Solar Forcing of Climate
(Surveys in Geophysics, Volume 33, Issue 3-4, pp. 445-451, July 2012)
- C. de Jager


Climatic variables as indicators of solar activity
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 52, Issue 7, pp. 931-936, December 2012)
- A. S. Balybina, A. A. Karakhanyan


Stratospheric circumpolar vortex as a link between solar activity and circulation of the lower atmosphere
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 52, Issue 7, pp. 937-943, December 2012)
- S. V. Veretenenko, M. G. Ogurtsov


Impact of the geomagnetic field and solar radiation on climate change
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 52, Issue 8, pp. 959-976, December 2012)
- V. A. Dergachev, S. S. Vasiliev, O. M. Raspopov, H. Jungner


Is there a planetary influence on solar activity?
(Astronomy & Astrophysics, Volume 548, pp. 1-9, December 2012)
- J. A. Abreu et al.


Orbital forcing of tree-ring data (PDF)
(Nature Climate Change, Volume 2, Number 12, pp. 862-866, December 2012)
- Jan Esper et al.


Solar influences on atmospheric circulation
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volumes 90-91, pp. 15-25, December 2012)
- K. Georgieva et al.


A Mechanism for Lagged North Atlantic Climate Response to Solar Variability
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 40, Issue 2, pp. 434-439, January 2013)
- Adam A. Scaife et al.


Solar irradiance modulation of Equator-to-Pole (Arctic) temperature gradients: Empirical evidence for climate variation on multi-decadal timescales (PDF)
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Volume 93, pp. 45-56, February 2013)
- Willie Soon, David R. Legates


A possible solar pacemaker for Holocene fluctuations of a salt-marsh in southern Italy
(Quaternary International, Volume 288, pp. 239-248, March 2013)
- Federico Di Rita


The role of solar activity in global warming
(Herald of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Volume 83, Issue 3, pp. 275-285, May 2013)
- S. V. Avakyan


Solar Wind, Earth's Rotation and Changes in Terrestrial Climate (PDF)
(Physical Review & Research International, Volume 3, Issue 2, pp. 117-136, April-June 2013)
- Nils-Axel Morner


Solar and Planetary Oscillation Control on Climate Change: Hind-Cast, Forecast and a Comparison with the CMIP5 GCMS (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 24, Number 3-4, pp. 455-496, June 2013)
- Nicola Scafetta


Grand Minimum of the Total Solar Irradiance Leads to the Little Ice Age (PDF)
(Journal of Geology & Geosciences, Volume 2, Issue 2, pp. 1-10, July 2013)
- Habibullo I. Abdussamatov


Climate change and decadal to centennial-scale periodicities recorded in a late Holocene NE Pacific marine record: Examining the role of solar forcing
(Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, Volume 386, pp. 669-689, September 2013)
- J. M. Galloway, A. Wigston, R. T. Patterson, G. T. Swindles, E. Reinhardt, H. M. Roe


Influence of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, El Niño-Southern Oscillation and solar forcing on climate and primary productivity changes in the northeast Pacific
(Quaternary International, Volume 310, pp. 124-139, October 2013)
- R. Timothy Patterson et al.


Phase-locked states and abrupt shifts in Pacific climate indices (PDF)
(Physics Letters A, Volume 377, Issue 28-30, pp. 1749-1755, October 2013)
- David H. Douglass


Terrestrial ground temperature variations in relation to solar magnetic variability, including the present Schwabe cycle
(Natural Science, Volume 5, Number 10, pp. 1112-1120, October 2013)
- C. de Jager, H. Nieuwenhuijzen


Discussion on climate oscillations: CMIP5 general circulation models versus a semi-empirical harmonic model based on astronomical cycles (PDF)
(Earth-Science Reviews, Volume 126, pp. 321-357, November 2013)
- Nicola Scafetta


New evidence of solar variation in temperature proxies from Northern Fennoscandia
(Advances in Space Research, Volume 52, Issue 9, pp. 1647-1654, November 2013)
- M. Ogurtsov et al.


Clouds blown by the solar wind
(Environmental Research Letters, Volume 8, Number 4, December 2013)
- M. Voiculescu, I. Usoskin, S. Condurache-Bota


Deep solar activity minima, sharp climate changes, and their impact on ancient civilizations
(Geomagnetism and Aeronomy, Volume 53, Issue 8, pp. 917-921, December 2013)
- O. M. Raspopov, V. A. Dergachev, G. I. Zaitseva, M. G. Ogurtsov


Evidence of the solar Gleissberg cycle in the nitrate concentration in polar ice
(Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics, 2014)
- M. G. Ogurtsov, M. Oinonen


ACRIM total solar irradiance satellite composite validation versus TSI proxy models
(Astrophysics and Space Science, 2014)
- Nicola Scafetta, Richard C. Willson




An Inconvenient Truth:

An Inconvenient Truth : a focus on its portrayal of the hydrologic cycle
(GeoJournal, Volume 70, Number 1, pp. 15-19, September 2007)
- David R. Legates


An Inconvenient Truth : blurring the lines between science and science fiction
(GeoJournal, Volume 70, Number 1, pp. 11-14, September 2007)
- Roy W. Spencer




Armed Conflict:

The Case Against Linking Environmental Degradation and National Security
(Journal of International Studies, Volume 19, Number 3, pp. 461-476, 1990)
- Daniel Deudney


Climate change, social unrest and dynastic transition in ancient China
(Chinese Science Bulletin, Volume 50, Number 2, pp. 137-144, January 2005)
- Dian Zhang et al.


Climatic Change, Wars and Dynastic Cycles in China Over the Last Millennium
(Climatic Change, Volume 76, Issue 3-4, pp. 459-477, June 2006)
- David D. Zhang et al.


Climate Change and War Frequency in Eastern China over the Last Millennium
(Human Ecology, Volume 35, Number 4, pp. 403-414, August 2007)
- David D. Zhang et al.


Climate change, environmental degradation and armed conflict
(Political Geography, Volume 26, Issue 6, pp. 674-694, August 2007)
- Clionadh Raleigh, Henrik Urdal


Climate change and violent conflict in Europe over the last millennium (PDF)
(Climatic Change, Volume 99, Issue 1-2, pp. 65-79, March 2010)
- Richard S. J. Tol, Sebastian Wagner


Paleoclimates and the emergence of fortifications in the tropical Pacific islands
(Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, Volume 29, Issue 1, pp. 113-124, March 2010)
- Julie S. Field, Peter V. Lape


Periodic climate cooling enhanced natural disasters and wars in China during AD 10-1900
(Proceedings of the Royal Society B, Volume 277, Number 1701, pp. 3745-3753, July 2010)
- Zhibin Zhang et al.


Climate not to blame for African civil wars
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 107, Number 38, pp. 16477-16482, September 2010)
- Halvard Buhaug


* Reply to Burke et al.: Bias and climate war research
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 107, Number 51, pp. E186-E187, December 2010)
- Halvard Buhaug


Climate Wars? Assessing the Claim That Drought Breeds Conflict
(International Security, Volume 36, Issue 3, pp. 79-106, Winter 2011/2012)
- Ole Magnus Theisen, Helge Holtermann, Halvard Buhaug


Climate clashes? Weather variability, land pressure, and organized violence in Kenya, 1989-2004
(Journal of Peace Research, Volume 49, Number 1, pp. 81-96, January 2012)
- Ole Magnus Theisen


Does climate change drive land-use conflicts in the Sahel?
(Journal of Peace Research, Volume 49, Number 1, pp. 97-111, January 2012)
- Tor A Benjaminsen et al.


Climate-related natural disasters, economic growth, and armed civil conflict
(Journal of Peace Research, Volume 49, Number 1, pp. 147-162, January 2012)
- Drago Bergholt, Paivi Lujala


Don't blame the weather! Climate-related natural disasters and civil conflict
(Journal of Peace Research, Volume 49, Number 1, pp. 163-176, January 2012)
- Rune T Slettebak




Climategate:

Accessing environmental information relating to climate change: a case study under UK freedom of information legislation (PDF)
(Environmental Law and Management, Volume 22, Issue 1, pp. 3-12, 2010)
- John Abbot, Jennifer Marohasy


If the Science Is Solid, Why Stoop? An Environmental Scientist Parses Climategate (PDF)
(Academic Questions, Volume 23, Number 1, pp. 54-56, March 2010)
- Stanley W. Trimble




IPCC:

Global climate protection policy: The limits of scientific advice - Part I
(Global Environmental Change, Volume 4, Number 2, pp. 140-159, 1994)
- Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen


Global climate protection policy: The limits of scientific advice - Part II
(Global Environmental Change, Volume 4, Number 3, pp. 185-200, 1994)
- Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen


Britain and the International Panel on climate change: The impacts of scientific advice on global warming part I: Integrated policy analysis and the global dimension
(Environmental Politics, Volume 4, Issue 1, pp. 1-18, 1995)
- Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen


Britain and the international panel on climate change: The impacts of scientific advice on global warming part II: The domestic story of the British response to climate change
(Environmental Politics, Volume 4, Issue 2, pp. 175-19, 1995)
- Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen


The IPCC future projections: are they plausible? (PDF)
(Climate Research, Volume 10, Number 2, pp. 155-162, August 1998)
- Vincent Gray


The UN IPCC's Artful Bias: Summary of Findings: Glaring Omissions, False Confidence and Misleading Statistics in the Summary for Policymakers
(Energy & Environment, Volume 13, Number 3, pp. 311-328, July 2002)
- Wojick D. E.


The IPCC Emission Scenarios: An Economic-Statistical Critique
(Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Number 2-3, pp. 159-185, May 2003)
- Ian Castles, David R. Henderson


Economics, Emissions Scenarios and the Work of the IPCC
(Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Number 4, pp. 415-435, July 2003)
- Ian Castles, David Henderson


The Treatment of Economic Issues by The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 2, pp. 321-326, March 2005)
- David Henderson


SRES, IPCC and the Treatment of Economic Issues: What Has Emerged?
(Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 3-4, pp. 549-578, July 2005)
- David Henderson


Tractatus logico-climaticus
(Society, Volume 44, Number 4, pp. 12-13, May 2007)
- Philip Stott


Alarmist Misrepresentations of the Findings of the Latest Scientific Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(The Electricity Journal, Volume 20, Issue 7, pp. 38-46, August-September 2007)
- Henry R. Linden


Biased Policy Advice from The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 7-8, pp. 929-936, December 2007)
- Richard S. J. Tol


The IPCC: Structure, Processes and Politics Climate Change - the Failure of Science
(Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 7-8, pp. 1073-1078, December 2007)
- William J. R. Alexander


A Suggestion to Climate Scientists and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, Volume 89, Issue 11, pp. 108-108, March 2008)
- Syun-Ichi Akasofu


Climate change scenarios and long term projections
(Climatic Change, Volume 97, Issue 1-2, pp. 23-47, November 2009)
- Warwick J. McKibbin, David Pearce, Alison Stegman


A Critical Discussion of the Stern and IPCC Analyses of Carbon Emission Mitigation Possibilities and Costs
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 2, pp. 49-74, March 2010)
- Ted Trainer


Nomenclature, Radiative Forcing and Temperature Projections in IPCC Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis (AR4)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 21, Number 7, pp. 815-831, December 2010)
- H. Douglas Lightfoot


Reasoning about climate uncertainty
(Climatic Change, Volume 108, Issue 4, pp. 723-732, October 2011)
- Judith Curry


IPCC Underestimates the Sun's Role in Climate Change
(Energy & Environment, Volume 24, Number 3-4, pp. 431-454, June 2013)
- Bas van Geel, Peter A. Ziegler


Analyses of IPCC’s Warming Calculation Results (PDF)
(Journal of Chemical, Biological and Physical Sciences, Volume 3, Number 4, pp. 2912-2930, August 2013 - October 2013)
- Antero Ollila




Kyoto Protocol:

Unknowns about climatic variability render treaty targets premature (PDF)
(Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, Volume 78, Issue 50, pp. 584, 1997)
- S. Fred Singer


After Kyoto: A Global Scramble for Advantage (PDF)
(The Independent Review, Volume 4, Number 1, pp. 19-40, 1999)
- Bruce Yandle


Taxation of greenhouse gases: why Kyoto will not be implemented
(International Journal of Global Energy Issues, Volume 12, Number 7/8, pp. 372-376, 1999)
- Marian Radetzki


Differentiation since Kyoto: An exploration of Australian climate policy in comparison to Europe/UK
(Energy & Environment, Volume 11, Number 3, pp. 343-354, May 2000)
- Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen


The Kyoto Climate Change treaty
(Society, Volume 37, Number 4, pp. 43-48, May 2000)
- William H. Lash


A 2004 View of the Kyoto Protocol
(Energy & Environment, Volume 15, Number 3, pp. 505-511, July 2004)
- S. Fred Singer


Lessons Not Learned in Environmental Governance: International Climate Policy Beyond Kyoto
(Asia Pacific Journal of Environmental Law, Volume 11, Issues 1 & 2, 2008)
- Aynsley Kellow


The impact of carbon geological sequestration
(Journal of Natural Gas Science and Engineering, Volume 1, Issue 3, pp. 103-111, September 2009)
- Xina Xie, Michael J. Economides


Four Problems With Global Carbon Markets: A Critical Review
(Energy & Environment, Volume 22, Number 6, pp. 681-694, August 2011)
- Benjamin K. Sovacool




Socio-Economic:

Can we control the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere? (PDF)
(Energy, Volume 2, Issue 3, pp. 287-291, September 1977)
- Freeman J. Dyson


Resources, population, environment: an oversupply of false bad news
(Science, Volume 208, Issue 4451, pp. 1431-1437, June 1980)
- Julian L. Simon


A perspective on global environmental crises
(Futures, Volume 19, Issue 3, pp. 240-253, June 1987)
- Vaclav Smil


The greenhouse effect: Chicken Little and our response to global warming
(Journal of Forestry, Journal Volume 87, Number 7, pp. 35-39, 1989)
- Patrick J. Michaels


Planetary Warming: Realities and Responses
(Population and Development Review, Volume 16, Number 1, pp. 1-29, March 1990)
- Vaclav Smil


Environmental externalities and CO2: Not with our money, you don't
(The Electricity Journal, Volume 4, Issue 2, pp. 40-45, March 1991)
- Fredrick D. Palmer


The greenhouse crisis: myths and misconceptions
(Area, Volume 23, Number 1, pp. 11-18, March 1991)
- C. R. de Freitas


Benefits of global warming
(Society, Volume 29, Number 3, pp. 33-40, March 1992)
- S. Fred Singer


Environment, Environmentalists, and Global Change: A Skeptic's Evaluation
(New Literary History, Volume 24, Number 4, pp. 783-795, 1993)
- Reid A. Bryson


Strategies to Enhance Adaptability: Technological Change, Economic Growth and Free Trade (PDF)
(Climatic Change, Volume 30, pp. 427-449, 1995)
- Indur M. Goklany


Adapting North American agriculture to climate change in review
(Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, Volume 80, Issue 1, pp. 1-53, June 1996)
- William E. Easterling


The evolution of an energy contrarian (PDF)
(Annual Review of Energy and the Environment, Volume 211, pp. 31-67, November 1996)
- Henry R. Linden


A winning coalition of advocacy: Climate research, bureaucracy and "alternative" fuels
(Energy Policy, Volume 25, Number 4, pp. 439-444, March 1997)
- Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen


Rethinking the role of adaptation in climate policy (PDF)
(Global Environmental Change, Volume 8, Issue 2, pp. 159-170, June 1998)
- Roger A. Pielke Jr.


Environmentalism and Economic Freedom: The Case for Private Property Rights
(Journal of Business Ethics, Volume 17, Number 16, pp. 1887-1899, December 1998)
- Walter Block


Climate change and the world bank: Opportunity for global governance?
(Energy & Environment, Volume 10, Number 1, pp. 27-50, January 1999)
- Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen


Managing Planet Earth; Adaptation and Cosmology (PDF)
(The Cato Journal, Volume 19 Number 1, pp. 69-83, Spring/Summer 1999)
- Curtis A. Pendergraft


Weathering climate change: some simple rules to guide adaptation decisions (PDF)
(Ecological Economics, Volume 30, Issue 1, pp. 67-78, July 1999)
- Samuel Fankhauser, Joel B. Smith, Richard S. J. Tol


Do we really need a carbon tax?
(Applied Energy, Volume 64, Issues 1-4, pp. 311-316, September 1999)
- V. V. Klimenko, O. V. Mikushina, A. G. Tereshin


Forecasting World Food Supplies: The Impact of the Rising Atmospheric Co2 Concentration
(Technology, Volume 7, Supplement 1, pp. 3-55, 2000)
- Craig D. Idso, Keith E. Idso


Potential Consequences of Increasing Atmospheric CO2 Concentration Compared to Other Environmental Problems (PDF)
(Technology, Volume 7, Supplement 1, pp. 189-213, 2000)
- Indur M. Goklany


Turning the big knob: An evaluation of the use of energy policy to modulate future climate impacts
(Energy & Environment, Volume 11, Number 3, pp. 255-275, May 2000)
- Roger A. Pielke Jr., R. Klein, D. Sarewitz


Climate Alarmism and Corporate Responsibility
(The Electricity Journal, Volume 13, Issue 7, pp. 65-71, August-September 2000)
- Robert L. Bradley Jr.


Mitigation versus compensation in global warming policy (PDF)
(Economics Bulletin, Volume 17, Number 2, pp. 1-6, December 2001)
- Ross McKitrick


Investing Against Climate Change: Why Failure Remains Possible
(Environmental Politics, Volume 11, Issue 3, pp. 1-30, 2002)
- Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen


Environmentalism in the light of Menger and Mises (PDF)
(Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics, Volume 5, Number 2, pp. 3-15, June 2002)
- George Reisman


The geo-politics of sustainable development: bureaucracies and politicians in search of the holy grail
(Geoforum, Volume 33, Issue 3, pp. 351-365, August 2002)
- Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen


How healthy is the world?
(British Medical Journal, Volume 325, Issue 7378, pp. 1461-1466, December 2002)
- Bjorn Lomborg


Science, Equity, and the War against Carbon
(Science, Technology, & Human Values, Volume 28, Number 1, pp. 69-92, 2003)
- Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen


The Precautionary Principle Versus Risk Analysis
(Risk Analysis, Volume 23, Issue 1, pp. 1-3, February 2003)
- Chauncey Starr


Best practices in prediction for decision-making: Lessons from the atmospheric and earth sciences (PDF)
(Ecology, Volume 84, Number 6, pp. 1351-1358, June 2003)
- Roger A. Pielke Jr., Richard T. Conant


Relative Contributions of Global Warming to Various Climate Sensitive Risks, and their Implications for Adaptation and Mitigation (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 14, Number 6, pp. 797-822, November 2003)
- Indur M. Goklany


Global Warming and Its Dangers (PDF)
(The Independent Review, Volume 8, Number 4, pp. 591-597, Spring 2004)
- Jeffrey R. Clark, Dwight R. Lee


When scientists politicize science: making sense of controversy over The Skeptical Environmentalist (PDF)
(Environmental Science & Policy, Volume 7, Issue 5, pp. 405-417, October 2004)
- Roger A. Pielke Jr.


Global Warming, the Politicization of Science, and Michael Crichton's State of Fear (PDF)
(Journal of Scientific Exploration, Volume 19, Number 2, pp. 247-256, 2005)
- David Deming


On the Opposition Against the Book The Skeptical Environmentalist by B. Lomborg (PDF)
(Journal of Information Ethics, Volume 14, Number 1, pp. 16-28, Spring 2005)
- Arthur Rorsch, Thomas Frello, Ray Soper, Adriaan de Lange


Australia's Environment Undergoing Renewal, Not Collapse (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 3-4, pp. 457-480, July 2005)
- Jennifer Marohasy


A Climate Policy for the Short and Medium Term: Stabilization or Adaptation? (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 16, Number 3-4, pp. 667-680, July 2005)
- Indur M. Goklany


The Precautionary Principle: A High-Risk Principle
(Economic Affairs, Volume 25, Issue 3, pp. 60-62, September 2005)
- Gabriel Calzada, Cecile Philippe, Xavier Mera


Science and Environmental Policy-Making: Bias-Proofing the Assessment Process (PDF)
(Canadian Journal of Agricultural Economics, Volume 53, Number 4, pp. 275-290, December 2005)
- Ross McKitrick


Should We Have Acted Thirty Years Ago to Prevent Climate Change? (PDF)
(The Independent Review, Volume 11, Number 2, pp. 283-288, 2006)
- Randall G. Holcombe


A critical review of some recent Australian regional climate reports
(Energy & Environment, Volume 17, Number 1, pp. 13-28, January 2006)
- John D. McLean


Climate change in the 21st century (PDF)
(Society, Volume 43, Number 6, pp. 63-70, September 2006)
- Indur M. Goklany


The Government Grant System: Inhibitor of Truth and Innovation? (PDF)
(Journal of Information Ethics, Volume 16, Number 1, Spring 2007)
- Donald W. Miller


Governments and Climate Change Issues: The case for rethinking
(World Economics, Volume 8, Issue 2, pp. 183-228, April 2007)
- David R. Henderson


Integrated strategies to reduce vulnerability and advance adaptation, mitigation, and sustainable development (PDF)
(Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change, Volume 12, Number 5, pp. 755-786, June 2007)
- Indur M. Goklany


How Serious is the Global Warming Threat?
(Society, Volume 44, Number 5, pp. 45-50, September 2007)
- Roy W. Spencer


New Light or Fixed Presumptions? The OECD, the IMF and the treatment of climate change issues
(World Economics, Volume 8, Issue 4, pp. 203-221, October 2007)
- David Henderson


Global Warming: The Social Construction of A Quasi-Reality? (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 6, pp. 805-813, November 2007)
- Dennis Ambler


Is a Richer-but-warmer World Better than Poorer-but-cooler Worlds? (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 7-8, pp. 1023-1048, December 2007)
- Indur M. Goklany


Climatic Change and the Future of the Human Environment
(International Social Science Journal, Volume 48, Issue 4, pp. 512-523, June 2008)
- Vladimir M. Kotlyakov


The Eco-Industrial Complex in USA - Global Warming and Rent-Seeking Coalitions
(Energy & Environment, Volume 19, Number 7, pp. 941-958, December 2008)
- Ivan Jankovic


Economists and Climate Science: A Critique
(World Economics, Volume 10, Number 1, pp. 59-90, 2009)
- David Henderson


Climate Change: Dangers of a Singular Approach and Consideration of a Sensible Strategy
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 1-2, pp. 201-205, January 2009)
- Tim F. Ball


Climate Policy : Quo Vadis?
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 1-2, pp. 207-213, January 2009)
- Hans Labohm


History, Politics, and Claims of Man-Made Global Warming
(Social Philosophy and Policy, Volume 26, Issue 3, pp. 231-271, June 2009)
- John David Lewis


Is Climate Change the "Defining Challenge of Our Age"? (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 3, pp. 279-302, July 2009)
- Indur M. Goklany


Privatising Climate Policy
(Economic Affairs, Volume 29, Issue 3, pp. 57-62, August 2009)
- Graham Dawson


Rolling the DICE: William Nordhaus’s Dubious Case for a Carbon Tax (PDF)
(The Independent Review, Volume 14, Number 2, pp. 197-217, Fall 2009)
- Robert P. Murphy


Scientific Shortcomings in the EPA's Endangerment Finding from Greenhouse Gases (PDF)
(The Cato Journal, Volume 29 Number 3, pp. 497-521, Fall 2009)
- Patrick J. Michaels, Paul C. Knappenberger


Climate Vulnerability and the Indispensable Value of Industrial Capitalism (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 5, pp. 733-745, September 2009)
- Keith H. Lockitch


Climate Change and Food Production
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 7, pp. 1099-1116, November 2009)
- T.R.C. Curtin


Ecological Science as a Creation Story (PDF)
(The Independent Review, Volume 14, Number 4, pp. 513-534, Spring 2010)
- Robert H. Nelson


Pluralism Lost: Sustainability’s Unfortunate Fall
(Academic Questions, Volume 23, Number 1, pp. 102-111, March 2010)
- Edward T. Wimberley


The Fallacies of Concurrent Climate Policy Efforts
(Ambio, Volume 39, Number 3, pp. 211-222, May 2010)
- Marian Radetzki


Early Climate Change Consensus at the National Academy: The Origins and Making of Changing Climate (PDF)
(Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences, Volume 40, Number 3, pp. 318-349, Summer 2010)
- Nicolas Nierenberg, Walter R. Tschinkel, Victoria J. Tschinkel


An Ethical Defense of Global-Warming Skepticism (PDF)
(Reason Papers, Volume 32, pp. 7-27, Fall 2010)
- William Irwin, Brian Williams


Free Markets, Property Rights and Climate Change: How to Privatize Climate Policy (PDF)
(Libertarian Papers, Volume 3, Number 10, pp. 1-29, April 2011)
- Graham Dawson


A simple state-contingent pricing rule for complex intertemporal externalities (PDF)
(Energy Economics, Volume 33, Issue 1, pp. 111-120, January 2011)
- Ross McKitrick


An evaluation of the targets and timetables of proposed Australian emissions reduction policies (PDF)
(Environmental Science & Policy, Volume 14, Issue 1, pp. 20-27, January 2011)
- Roger A. Pielke Jr.


A Multidisciplinary, Science-Based Approach to the Economics of Climate Change (PDF)
(International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, Volume 8, Number 4, pp. 985-1031, April 2011)
- Alan Carlin


Climate Politics, Strategic Behaviour, Hold‐Outs, Free Riders And Rent‐Seekers
(Economic Affairs, Volume 31, Number 2, pp. 4-9, June 2011)
- Gordon L. Brady


Copenhagen, Cancún and the Limits of Global Welfare Economics
(Economic Affairs, Volume 31, Number 2, pp. 10-16, June 2011)
- David Campbell, Matthias Klaes


Is climate change the number one threat to humanity? (PDF)
(Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change, Volume 3, Issue 6, pp. 489-508, November/December 2012)
- Indur M. Goklany


Learning and Teaching Climate Science: The Perils of Consensus Knowledge Using Agnotology
(Science & Education, Volume 22, Issue 8, pp. 2007-2017, August 2013)
- David R. Legates, Willie Soon, William M. Briggs


* Climate Consensus and ‘Misinformation’: A Rejoinder to Agnotology, Scientific Consensus, and the Teaching and Learning of Climate Change (PDF)
(Science & Education, August 2013)
- David R. Legates, Willie Soon, William M. Briggs, Christopher Monckton


Austrian economics and climate change
(The Review of Austrian Economics, Volume 26, Issue 2, pp. 183-206, June 2013)
- Graham Dawson


Long-Term Forecasting of Global Carbon Dioxide Emissions: Reducing Uncertainties Using a Per Capita Approach (PDF)
(Journal of Forecasting, Volume 32, Issue 5, pp. 435-451, August 2013)
- Ross Mckitrick, Mark C. Strazicich, Junsoo Lee


Science in the Public Square: Global Climate Alarmism and Historical Precedents (PDF)
(Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons, Volume 14, Number 3, pp. 69-75, Fall 2013)
- Richard S. Lindzen


Climate Change Policy: What Do the Models Tell Us?
(Journal of Economic Literature, Volume 51, Number 3, pp. 860-872, September 2013)
- Robert S. Pindyck


Co-fluctuation patterns of per capita carbon dioxide emissions: The role of energy markets
(Energy Economics, Volume 39, pp. 1-12, September 2013)
- Ross McKitrick, Joel Wood


Modern Environmentalism: A Longer Term Threat to Western Civilization
(Energy & Environment, Volume 24, Number 6, pp. 1063-1072, October 2013)
- Alan Carlin




Stern Review:

The Stern Review: A Dual Critique (PDF)
(World Economics, Volume 7, Number 4, pp. 165-232, October-December 2006)
- Robert M. Carter, C. R. de Freitas, Indur M. Goklany, David Holland, Richard S. Lindzen, Ian Byatt, Ian Castles, Indur M. Goklany, David Henderson, Nigel Lawson, Ross McKitrick, Julian Morris, Alan Peacock, Colin Robinson, Robert Skidelsky


* Response to Simmonds and Steffen (PDF)
(World Economics, Volume 8, Number 2, pp. 143-151, April-June 2007)
- David Holland, Robert M. Carter, C. R. de Freitas, Indur M. Goklany, Richard S. Lindzen


The Stern Review of the economics of climate change: a comment (PDF)
(Energy & Environment, Volume 17, Number 6, pp. 977-981, November 2006)
- Richard S. J. Tol


Climate Science and the Stern Review (PDF)
(World Economics, Volume 8, Number 2, pp. 161-182, April-June 2007)
- Robert M. Carter, C. R. de Freitas, Indur M. Goklany, David Holland, Richard S. Lindzen


Mistreatment of the economic impacts of extreme events in the Stern Review Report on the Economics of Climate Change (PDF)
(Global Environmental Change, Volume 17, Issues 3-4, pp. 302-310, August-October 2007)
- Roger Pielke Jr.


Is Stern Review on climate change alarmist?
(Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 5, pp. 521-532, September 2007)
- S. Niggol Seo


The Economic Science Fiction of Climate Change: A Free-Market Perspective on the Stern Review and the IPCC
(Economic Affairs, Volume 28, Issue 4, pp. 42-47, December 2008)
- Graham Dawson


The Stern Review on Climate Change: Inconvenient Sensitivities
(Energy & Environment, Volume 20, Number 5, pp. 779-798, September 2009)
- Sergey Mityakov, Christof Rühl




Historic: (Pre-1970) * This section is not counted

Solar Variability as a Factor in the Fluctuations of Climate during Geological Time
(Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography, Volume 31, pp. 295-315, 1949)
- H. C. Willett


Has the amount of Carbon Dioxide in the Atmosphere Changed Significantly Since the Beginning of the Twentieth Century? (PDF)
(Monthly Weather Review, Volume 83, Issue 10, pp. 225-231, 1955)
- Giles Slocum


Cosmic Radiation and the Weather
(Nature, Volume 183, Number 4659, pp. 451-452, February 1959)
- Edward P. Ney


Variations in Radiocarbon Concentration and Sunspot Activity
(Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 66, Issue 1, pp.273, January 1961)
- M. Stuiver


The early medieval warm epoch and its sequel (PDF)
(Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, Volume 1, pp. 13-37, 1965)
- H. H. Lamb




Journal Citation List: (Count: 357)

AAPG Bulletin
Academic Questions
Advances in Atmospheric Sciences
Advances in Geosciences
Advances in Global Change Research
Advances in Meteorology
Advances in Space Research
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology
Agricultural Meteorology
Agricultural Water Management
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
Agronomy Journal
Ambio
American Journal of Botany
American Journal of Human Biology
Annales Geophysicae
Annals of Applied Statistics
Annals of Glaciology
Annual Review of Energy and the Environment
Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics
Antiquity
Applied Energy
Applied Physics Research
Aquatic Botany
Arabian Journal of Geosciences
Arctic and Alpine Research
Area
Asia-Pacific Journal of Atmospheric Sciences
Asia Pacific Journal of Environmental Law
Astronautics and Aeronautics
Astronomical Notes
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Astronomy & Geophysics
Astrophysics and Space Science
Astrophysics and Space Science Library
Astrophysics and Space Sciences Transactions
Atmosfera
Atmospheric and Climate Sciences
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions
Atmospheric Environment
Atmospheric Environment Part B: Urban Atmosphere
Atmospheric Research
Atmospheric Science Letters
Australian Journal of Emergency Management
BioScience
Boreas
Boundary-Layer Meteorology
British Medical Journal (BMJ)
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society (BAMS)
Bulletin of the Russian Academy of Sciences: Physics
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology
Canadian Journal of Agricultural Economics
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences
Canadian Journal of Forest Research
Central European Journal of Physics
Chemical Engineering Progress
Chemical Innovation
Chinese Science Bulletin
Climate
Climate Dynamics
Climate of the Past
Climate Research
Climatic Change
Climatological Bulletin
Coastal Engineering
Cold Regions Science and Technology
Comptes Rendus Geosciences
Contemporary South Asia
Coral Reefs
Current Biology
Current Opinion in Biotechnology
Deep Sea Research Part I
Deep Sea Research Part II
Development in Earth Science
Diversity and Distributions
Doklady Earth Sciences
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Earth-Science Reviews
Earth System Dynamics
Ecological Complexity
Ecological Economics
Ecological Modelling
Ecological Monographs
Ecology
Ecology and Evolution
Ecology of Freshwater Fish
Economic Affairs
Economic Analysis and Policy
Economics Bulletin
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Energy
Energy & Environment
Energy & Fuels
Energy and Buildings
Energy Economics
Energy Policy
Energy Sources
Environment International
Environmental and Experimental Botany
Environmental Conservation
Environmental Geology
Environmental Geosciences
Environmental Health Perspectives
Environmental Law and Management
Environmental Politics
Environmental Pollution
Environmental Research
Environmental Research Letters
Environmental Science & Policy
Environmental Science: An Indian Journal
Environmental Science and Pollution Research
Environmental Software
Environmetrics
Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Euresis Journal
Fresenius' Journal of Analytical Chemistry
Future Virology
Futures
Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
Geoforum
Geografiska Annaler: Series A, Physical Geography
Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography
Geographica Pannonica
GeoJournal
Geology
Geomagnetism and Aeronomy
Geophysical Journal International
Geophysical Research Letters
Geoscience Canada
Global and Planetary Change
Global Biogeochemical Cycles
Global Change Biology
Global Environmental Change
Global Perspectives on Geography
GSA Today
Herald of the Russian Academy of Sciences
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences
Human Ecology
Hydrological Sciences Journal
ICES Journal of Marine Science
Il Nuovo Cimento C
Interfaces
International Journal of Biometeorology
International Journal of Climatology
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
International Journal of Environmental Science and Engineering
International Journal of Environmental Studies
International Journal of Forecasting
International Journal of Geosciences
International Journal of Global Energy Issues
International Journal of Global Warming
International Journal of Medical Microbiology Supplements
International Journal of Modern Physics A
International Journal of Modern Physics B
International Journal of Modern Physics C
International Journal of Physical Sciences
International Journal of Remote Sensing
International Security
International Social Science Journal
Internationales Asienforum
IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science
Irish Astronomical Journal
Iron & Steel Technology
Irrigation and Drainage
Izvestiya, Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics
Journal of Aerosol Science
Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons
Journal of Anthropological Archaeology
Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology
Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics
Journal of Atmospheric and Terrestrial Physics
Journal of Biogeography
Journal of Business Ethics
Journal of Chemical, Biological and Physical Sciences
Journal of Chemical Education
Journal of Climate
Journal of Climate and Applied Meteorology
Journal of Coastal Research
Journal of Cosmology
Journal of Economic and Social Measurement
Journal of Economic Literature Journal of Electromagnetic Analysis and Applications
Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power
Journal of Environmental Management
Journal of Environmental Science and Health Part A
Journal of Environmental Sciences
Journal of Environmental Quality
Journal of Experimental Botany
Journal of Forecasting
Journal of Forestry
Journal of Geographic Information System
Journal of Geology & Geosciences
Journal of Geophysical Research
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans
Journal of Hydrology
Journal of Hydrometeorology
Journal of Information Ethics
Journal of Integrative Plant Biology
Journal of Interdisciplinary Cycle Research
Journal of International Studies
Journal of Lake Sciences
Journal of Marine Science
Journal of Marine Systems
Journal of Natural Gas Science and Engineering
Journal of Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics
Journal of Optical Technology
Journal of Paleolimnology
Journal of Peace Research
Journal of Physics G: Nuclear and Particle Physics
Journal of Physics Malaysia
Journal of Plant Physiology
Journal of Scientific Exploration
Journal of Sedimentary Research
Journal of the American Water Resources Association
Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences
Journal of the South African Institution of Civil Engineering
Journal of Vegetation Science
Kinematics and Physics of Celestial Bodies
Kybernetes
La Houille Blanche
Landscape and Urban Planning
Latvian Journal of Physics and Technical Sciences
Leadership and Management in Engineering
Libertarian Papers
Libyan Journal Medicine
Living Reviews of Solar Physics
Malaria Journal
Marine Biology
Marine Environmental Research
Marine Geology
Marine Pollution Bulletin
Mathematical Geology
Memorie della Società Astronomica Italiana
Meteorology and Atmospheric Physics
Meteorologische Zeitschrift
Mires and Peat
Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Monthly Weather Review
Moscow University Physics Bulletin
Natural Hazards
Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
Natural Hazards Review
Natural Science
Nature
Nature Climate Change
Nature Geoscience
Netherlands Journal of Geosciences
New Astronomy
New Concepts In Global Tectonics
New Literary History
New Phytologist
New Zealand Geographer
New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research
New Zealand Journal of Science
Nonlinear Engineering
Nordic Hydrology
Norwegian Polar Institute Letters
Oceanologica Acta
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
Paleoceanography
Paleontological Journal
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A
Physical Geography
Physical Review & Research International
Physical Review E
Physical Review Letters
Physics and Chemistry of the Earth
Physics Letters A
Physics Reports
Planetary and Space Science
Plant and Soil
Plant, Cell & Environment
Plant Ecology
Plant Physiology
PLoS Biology
Political Geography
Population and Development Review
Proceedings of the Estonian Academy of Sciences: Engineering
Proceedings of the ICE - Civil Engineering
Proceedings of the Indian National Science Academy A
Proceedings of the Japan Academy, Series B
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)
Proceedings of the Royal Society A
Proceedings of the Royal Society B
Progress in Natural Science
Progress in Oceanography
Progress in Physical Geography
Public Administration Review
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics
Quarterly Journal of the Hungarian Meteorological Service
Quaternary International
Quaternary Research
Quaternary Science Reviews
Reason Papers
Remote Sensing
Remote Sensing of Environment
Rendiconti Lincei
Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews
Renewable Energy
Reviews of Geophysics
Risk Analysis
Russian Journal of Earth Sciences
Science
Science & Education
Science China Earth Sciences
Science of the Total Environment
Science, Technology & Human Values
Scientia Horticulturae
Sedimentary Geology
Social Philosophy and Policy
Social Studies of Science
Society
Soil Science
SOLA
Solar Physics
South African Journal of Science
Space Science Reviews
Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and Biomolecular Spectroscopy
Statistics, Politics, and Policy
Studia Geophysica et Geodaetica
Sun and Geosphere
Surveys in Geophysics
Technology
Tectonophysics
The Astrophysical Journal
The Cato Journal
The Cryosphere
The Electricity Journal
The European Physical Journal Plus
The Holocene
The Independent Review
The ISME Journal
The Journal of Wildlife Management
The Lancet
The Lancet Infectious Diseases
The Open Atmospheric Science Journal
The Quarterly Review of Biology
The Review of Austrian Economics
The Review of Economics and Statistics
The Scientific World Journal
Theoretical and Applied Climatology
Thermal Engineering
Topics in Catalysis
Trends in Parasitology
Water, Air, & Soil Pollution
Water Resources Research
Water SA
Weather
Weather and Forecasting
Weather, Climate and Society
Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change
World Economics



Journal Notes:

AAPG Bulletin is a peer-reviewed science journal (ISSN: 0149-1423)
- Thomson Reuters (ISI) Science Citation Index lists the AAPG Bulletin as a peer-reviewed science journal
- Scopus lists the AAPG Bulletin as a peer-reviewed physical science journal
- EBSCO lists the AAPG Bulletin as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- "The AAPG Bulletin ...the leading peer-reviewed publication for information on geoscience" - AAPG Bulletin

Asia-Pacific Journal of Atmospheric Sciences is a peer-reviewed science journal (ISSN: 1976-7633)
- Thomson Reuters (ISI) Science Citation Index lists the Asia-Pacific Journal of Atmospheric Sciences as a peer-reviewed science journal
- Scopus lists the Asia-Pacific Journal of Atmospheric Sciences as a peer-reviewed physical science journal

Astronomy & Geophysics is a peer-reviewed science journal (ISSN: 1366-8781)
- Thomson Reuters (ISI) Science Citation Index lists Astronomy & Geophysics as a peer-reviewed science journal
- Scopus lists Astronomy & Geophysics as a peer-reviewed physical science journal
- EBSCO lists Astronomy & Geophysics as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal

Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology is a peer-reviewed science journal (ISSN: 0007-4802)
- Scopus lists the Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology as a peer-reviewed physical science journal
- "The Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology is a peer-reviewed scientific journal" - Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology

Climate Research is a peer-reviewed science journal (ISSN: 0936-577X)
- Thomson Reuters (ISI) Science Citation Index lists Climate Research as a peer-reviewed science journal
- Scopus lists Climate Research as a peer-reviewed physical science journal
- EBSCO lists Climate Research as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- "Manuscripts are critically evaluated by at least 3 reviewers" - Climate Research

Economic Affairs is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal (ISSN: 0265-0665)
- Scopus lists Economic Affairs as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- EBSCO lists Economic Affairs as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- "Economic Affairs is a fully refereed journal." - Economic Affairs

Economic Analysis and Policy is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal (ISSN: 0313-5926)
- EBSCO lists Economic Analysis and Policy as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- "Economic Analysis and Policy (EAP), a refereed journal" - Economic Analysis and Policy

Economics Bulletin is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal (ISSN: 1545-2921)
- Scopus lists the Economics Bulletin as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- "The Economics Bulletin is an open access, peer-reviewed, letters journal" (PDF) - Economics Bulletin

Energy & Environment is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal (ISSN: 0958-305X)
- The IPCC cites Energy & Environment 28 times
- Indexed in Compendex, EBSCO, Environment Abstracts, Google Scholar, JournalSeek, Scopus and Thomson Reuters (ISI)
- Found at hundreds of libraries and universities worldwide in print and electronic form. These include; Cornell University, Dartmouth College, Library of Congress, McGill University, Monash University, National Library of Australia, Stanford University, The British Library, University of British Columbia, University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, University of Queensland and MIT.
- Thomson Reuters (ISI) lists Energy & Environment as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- Scopus lists Energy & Environment as a peer-reviewed physical science journal
- EBSCO lists Energy & Environment as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- "E&E, by the way, is peer reviewed" - Tom Wigley, Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
- "I have published a few papers in E&E. All were peer-reviewed as usual. I have reviewed a few more for the journal." - Richard Tol Ph.D. Professor of the Economics of Climate Change, Vrije Universiteit, Netherlands
- "All Multi-Sciences primary journals are fully refereed" - Multi-Science Publishing
- "Regular issues include submitted and invited papers that are rigorously peer reviewed" - E&E Mission Statement

Energy Policy is a peer-reviewed science journal (ISSN: 0301-4215)
- Thomson Reuters (ISI) Science Citation Index lists Energy Policy as a peer-reviewed science journal
- Scopus lists Energy Policy as a peer-reviewed physical science journal
- EBSCO lists Energy Policy as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- "Energy Policy is an international peer-reviewed journal" - Elsevier

Environmental Geosciences is a peer-reviewed science journal (ISSN: 1075-9565)
- Scopus lists Environmental Geosciences as a peer-reviewed physical science journal
- EBSCO lists Environmental Geosciences as a peer-reviewed science journal
- "Environmental Geosciences is a peer-reviewed publication" - Environmental Geosciences

Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union is a peer-reviewed science journal (ISSN: 0096-3941)
- Scopus lists Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union as a peer-reviewed physical science journal
- "In making the decision about the publication of a manuscript, the editor may ...confer with reviewers" - Eos

Euresis Journal is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal (ISSN: 2239-2742)
- "The Editorial Board, with the help of external experts, reviews all manuscripts"

GSA Today is a peer-reviewed science journal (ISSN: 1052-5173)
- "GSA Today lead science articles are refereed" - GSA Today

International Journal of Modern Physics B is a peer-reviewed science journal (ISSN: 0217-9792)
- Thomson Reuters (ISI) Science Citation Index lists the International Journal of Modern Physics B as a peer-reviewed science journal
- Scopus lists the International Journal of Modern Physics B as a peer-reviewed science journal
- EBSCO lists the International Journal of Modern Physics B as a peer-reviewed science journal

Irrigation and Drainage is a peer-reviewed science journal (ISSN: 1531-0353)
- Thomson Reuters (ISI) Science Citation Index lists Irrigation and Drainage as a peer-reviewed science journal
- Scopus lists Irrigation and Drainage as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- EBSCO lists Irrigation and Drainage as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- "The Journal is a prestigious peer-reviewed publication" - Irrigation and Drainage

Iron & Steel Technology is a peer-reviewed science journal (ISSN: 1547-0423)
- Scopus lists Iron & Steel Technology as a peer-reviewed physical science journal
- "Iron & Steel Technology readers will find timely peer-reviewed articles" - Iron & Steel Technology

Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal (ISSN: 1543-4826)
- EBSCO lists the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- "Articles are subject to a double-blind peer-review process" (PDF) - Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons

Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics is a peer-reviewed science journal (ISSN: 1364-6826)
- Thomson Reuters (ISI) Science Citation Index lists the Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics as a peer-reviewed science journal
- Scopus lists the Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics as a peer-reviewed physical science journal
- EBSCO lists the Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- "The journal referees and publishes original research papers, using rigorous standards of review" - JASTP

Journal of Information Ethics is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal (ISSN: 1061-9321)
- Scopus lists the Journal of Information Ethics as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- EBSCO lists the Journal of Information Ethics as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal

Journal of Scientific Exploration is a peer-reviewed general interest journal (ISSN: 0892-3310)
- Scopus lists the Journal of Scientific Exploration as a peer-reviewed general interest journal
- EBSCO lists the Journal of Scientific Exploration as a peer-reviewed general interest journal
- "Manuscripts will be sent to two or more referees" (PDF) - Journal of Scientific Exploration

Latvian Journal of Physics and Technical Sciences is a peer-reviewed science journal (ISSN: 0868-8257)
- Scopus lists the Latvian Journal of Physics and Technical Sciences as a peer-reviewed physical science journal
- EBSCO lists the Latvian Journal of Physics and Technical Sciences as a peer-reviewed science journal
- "Thorough and constructive peer review" - Latvian Journal of Physics and Technical Sciences

New Concepts in Global Tectonics is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal (ISSN: 1833-2560)
- "Manuscripts are judged by reviewers on the basis of their scientific merit, quality, supporting data and evidence" - New Concepts in Global Tectonics
- "The establishment of the Editorial board and a peer review system in December 2005 enabled us to enhance the quality of the articles." (PDF) - Dr. Dong R. Choi, Editor, New Concepts in Global Tectonics

Public Administration Review is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal (ISSN: 0033-3352)
- Thomson Reuters (ISI) Social Sciences Citation Index lists Public Administration Review as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- Scopus lists Public Administration Review as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- EBSCO lists Public Administration Review as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- "PAR uses a double-blind review process" - Public Administration Review

Society is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal (ISSN: 0147-2011)
- Thomson Reuters (ISI) Social Sciences Citation Index lists Society as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- Scopus lists Society as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- EBSCO lists Society as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal

Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and Biomolecular Spectroscopy is a peer-reviewed science journal (ISSN: 1386-1425)
- Thomson Reuters (ISI) Science Citation Index lists Spectrochimica Acta Part A as a peer-reviewed science journal
- Scopus lists Spectrochimica Acta Part A as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- EBSCO lists Spectrochimica Acta Part A as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- "Appropriate Referees should be knowledgeable about the subject but have no close connection with any of the authors" - Spectrochimica Acta Part A

The Cato Journal is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal (ISSN: 0273-3072)
- Scopus lists The Cato Journal as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- EBSCO lists The Cato Journal as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- "All papers are refereed" - The Cato Journal

The Electricity Journal is a peer-reviewed science journal (ISSN: 1040-6190)
- Scopus lists The Electricity Journal as a peer-reviewed physical science journal
- EBSCO lists The Electricity Journal as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- "...which is used in the peer-review process" - The Electricity Journal
- "The Electricity Journal, a peer-reviewed scholarly publication" - Richard Cohen, Editor, The Electricity Journal

The Independent Review is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal (ISSN: 1086-1653)
- Thomson Reuters (ISI) Social Sciences Citation Index lists The Independent Review as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- Scopus lists The Independent Reviewl as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- EBSCO lists The Independent Review as a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
- "The Independent Review is thoroughly researched, peer-reviewed, and based on scholarship of the highest caliber" - The Independent Review

Nature Articles, Letters, Brief Communications, Communications Arising, Technical Reports, Analysis, Reviews, Perspectives, Progress articles and Insight articles are all peer-reviewed. Other contributed articles and all forms of published correction may also be peer-reviewed at the discretion of the editors.

Many popular journals like Nature frequently reject papers arbitrarily, "...each Nature journal has to decline many papers of very high quality" - Nature

EBSCO has been around for over 65 years and their services are used by Colleges, Universities, Hospitals, Medical Institutions, Government Institutions and Public Libraries.



Definitions:

Alarmism: (defined) "concern relating to a perceived negative environmental or socio-economic effect of ACC/AGW, usually exaggerated as catastrophic."

* Alarmism: (defined) "the attitudes and behavior of one who exaggerates dangers or always expects disaster."

Catastrophic: (defined) "a momentous tragic event ranging from extreme misfortune to utter overthrow or ruin."

Letters: (defined) "is a term used to describe a type of peer-reviewed scientific document format in certain scholarly journals such as Nature."

Nature Letters: (defined) "are short reports of original research focused on an outstanding finding whose importance means that it will be of interest to scientists in other fields. These should not be confused with Letters to the Editor."

Peer-Reviewed: (defined) "of or being scientific or scholarly writing or research that has undergone evaluation by other experts in the field to judge if it merits publication."

Paper: (defined) "a piece of writing on an academic subject."

Qualifier: (defined) "a word or phrase that qualifies the sense of another word; for example, the noun alarm is a modifier of clock in alarm clock."

Skeptic: (defined) "a person who questions the validity or authenticity of something purporting to be factual [ACC/AGW Alarmism]." (e.g. Richard S. Lindzen Ph.D. Professor Emeritus of Atmospheric Science at MIT, John R. Christy Ph.D. Professor of Atmospheric Science at UAH, Sherwood B. Idso Ph.D. Research Scientist Emeritus, U.S. Water Conservation Laboratory and Patrick J. Michaels Ph.D. Climatology)

Support: (defined) "to help to show something to be true."



Impact Factor is a subjectively devised determination of popularity not scientific validity, that is widely abused and manipulated.

The Number That's Devouring Science (PDF) (The Chronicle of Higher Education, October 15, 2005)
Deluged by so many manuscripts, high-impact journals can send only a fraction out to experts for review. Nature, for example, rejects half of the submissions it gets without forwarding them to referees, says its editor in chief, Philip Campbell. [...]

Dr. DeAngelis, of JAMA, says editors at some top journals have told her that they do consider citations when judging some papers. "There are people who won't publish articles," she says, "because it won't help their impact factor." [...]

Fiona Godlee, editor of BMJ (formerly known as the British Medical Journal), agrees that editors take impact factors into account when deciding on manuscripts, whether they realize it or not. ...She says editors may be rejecting not only studies in smaller or less-fashionable fields, but also important papers from certain regions of the world, out of fear that such reports won't attract sufficient citation attention.
European Association of Science Editors statement on inappropriate use of impact factors (PDF) (European Association of Science Editors, November 2007)
The impact factor, however, is not always a reliable instrument for measuring the quality of journals. Its use for purposes for which it was not intended, causes even greater unfairness.
"Quality not Quantity" – DFG Adopts Rules to Counter the Flood of Publications in Research (German Research Foundation, February 2010)
"Whether in performance-based funding allocations, postdoctoral qualifications, appointments, or reviewing funding proposals, increasing importance has been given to numerical indicators such as the H-index and the impact factor. The focus has not been on what research someone has done but rather how many papers have been published and where. This puts extreme pressure upon researchers to publish as much as possible and sometimes leads to cases of scientific misconduct in which incorrect statements are provided concerning the status of a publication. This is not in the interest of science,"
Why the impact factor of journals should not be used for evaluating research (PDF)
(British Medical Journal, Volume 314, pp. 498–502, February 1997)
- Per O. Seglen

Summary points:
- Use of journal impact factors conceals the difference in article citation rates (articles in the most cited half of articles in a journal are cited 10 times as often as the least cited half)
- Journals' impact factors are determined by technicalities unrelated to the scientific quality of their articles
- Journal impact factors depend on the research field: high impact factors are likely in journals covering large areas of basic research with a rapidly expanding but short lived literature that use many references per article
- Article citation rates determine the journal impact factor, not vice versa
The Impact Factor Game
(PLoS Medicine, Volume 3, Issue 6, June 2006)
- The PLoS Medicine Editors

...it is well known that editors at many journals plan and implement strategies to massage their impact factors. Such strategies include attempting to increase the numerator in the above equation by encouraging authors to cite articles published in the journal or by publishing reviews that will garner large numbers of citations. Alternatively, editors may decrease the denominator by attempting to have whole article types removed from it (by making such articles superficially less substantial, such as by forcing authors to cut down on the number of references or removing abstracts) or by decreasing the number of research articles published. These are just a few of the many ways of "playing the impact factor game."

One problem with this game, leaving aside the ethics of it, is that the rules are unclear—editors can, for example, try to persuade Thomson Scientific to reduce the denominator, but the company refuses to make public its process for choosing "citable" article types. Thomson Scientific, the sole arbiter of the impact factor game, is part of The Thomson Corporation, a for-profit organization that is responsible primarily to its shareholders. It has no obligation to be accountable to any of the stakeholders who care most about the impact factor—the authors and readers of scientific research.
Show Me The Data
(The Journal of Cell Biology, Volume 179, Number 6, pp. 1091-1092, December 2007)
- Mike Rossner, Heather Van Epps, Emma Hill

It became clear that Thomson Scientific could not or (for some as yet unexplained reason) would not sell us the data used to calculate their published impact factor. If an author is unable to produce original data to verify a figure in one of our papers, we revoke the acceptance of the paper. We hope this account will convince some scientists and funding organizations to revoke their acceptance of impact factors as an accurate representation of the quality—or impact—of a paper published in a given journal. Just as scientists would not accept the findings in a scientific paper without seeing the primary data, so should they not rely on Thomson Scientific's impact factor, which is based on hidden data.
Irreproducible results: a response to Thomson Scientific
(The Journal of Cell Biology, Volume 180, Number 2, pp. 254-255, January 2008)
- Mike Rossner, Heather Van Epps, Emma Hill

Impact factors are determined from a dataset produced by searching the Thomson Scientific database using specific parameters. As previously stated, our aim was to purchase that dataset for a few journals. Even if those results were for some reason not stored by Thomson Scientific, it is inconceivable to us that they cannot run the same search over the same database to produce the same dataset. The citation data for a given year should be static. In essence, Thomson Scientific is saying that they cannot repeat the experiment, which would be grounds for rejection of a manuscript submitted to any scientific journal.
Nefarious Numbers (PDF)
(arXiv:1010.0278, October 2010)
- Douglas N. Arnold, Kristine K. Fowler

The impact factor for a journal in a given year is calculated by ISI (Thomson Reuters) as the average number of citations in that year to the articles the journal published in the preceding two years. It has been widely criticized on a variety of grounds:

- A journal's distribution of citations does not determine its quality.
- The impact factor is a crude statistic, reporting only one particular item of information from the citation distribution.
- It is a flawed statistic. For one thing, the distribution of citations among papers is highly skewed, so the mean for the journal tends to be misleading. For another, the impact factor only refers to citations within the first two years after publication (a particularly serious de deficiency for mathematics, in which around 90% of citations occur after two years).
- The underlying database is flawed, containing errors and including a biased selection of journals.
- Many confounding factors are ignored, for example, article type (editorials, reviews, and letters versus original research articles), multiple authorship, self-citation, language of publication, etc.



Sources:

Abstracts and summaries have been obtained from the journal or publisher's website and various indexes such as; ArXiv, Astrophysics Data System (ADS), Citeseer, CSA Illumina, Elsevier ScienceDirect, Energy Citations Database (ECD), IngentaConnect, JSTOR, PubMed, SpringerLink, Refdoc and Wiley Online Library.



Updates:

10-23-09 - 450+ Peer-Reviewed Papers
12-13-09 - 500+ Peer-Reviewed Papers
04-21-10 - 700+ Peer-Reviewed Papers
06-20-10 - 750+ Peer-Reviewed Papers
07-25-10 - 800+ Peer-Reviewed Papers
01-14-11 - 850+ Peer-Reviewed Papers
04-13-11 - 900+ Peer-Reviewed Papers
05-17-12 - 1000+ Peer-Reviewed Papers
07-23-12 - 1100+ Peer-Reviewed Papers
02-12-14 - 1350+ Peer-Reviewed Papers



Acknowledgements:

The editors at Popular Technology.net would like to thank Adam Jayne for his extensive assistance with compiling the list, Dr. Khandekar for his 'Bibliography of Peer-Reviewed Papers', Dr. Idso for his research at CO2 Science and Dr. Michaels for his research at World Climate Report.



Citations:

  1. Internet Public Library - Gina Cacace IPL Reference Work (2009) - [Archive]

  2. Watts Up With That? - Reference: 450 skeptical peer reviewed papers (November 15, 2009) - [Archive]

  3. The Courier Mail - The papers Karoly didn’t see (November 15, 2009) - [Archive]

  4. Herald Sun - The papers Karoly didn't see (November 15, 2009) - [Archive]

  5. Science & Public Policy Institute - 450 Peer Reviewed Papers Supporting Skepticism of AGW-Caused Global Warming (November 16, 2009) - [Archive]

  6. Roberts, Malcolm (M.B.A.) - Re: Formal Complaint about behaviour of University of Melbourne Professor (November 17, 2009) - [Archive]

  7. New Zealand Climate Science Coalition - 450 Peer Reviewed Papers Supporting Skepticism of AGW-Caused Global Warming (November 18, 2009) - [Archive]

  8. Jensen, Rick (WDEL-AM) - Man-Made Global Warming Hoax Unleashed! (November 30, 2009) - [Archive]

  9. Lycklama, Heinz (Ph.D.) - Analysis of the Global Warming Issue (December 1, 2009) - [Archive]

  10. National Review - Peer-Reviewed Climate Skepticism (December 1, 2009)- [Archive]

  11. Canada Free Press - Open letter to Mr. Achim Steiner - Executive Director, UNEP (December 2, 2009) - [Archive]

  12. Lott, John (Ph.D.) - "450 Peer-Reviewed Papers Supporting Skepticism of "Man-Made" Global Warming" (December 5, 2009) - [Archive]

  13. NOS - Geen marginalisering van sceptici? Kom nou! (December 7, 2009) - [Archive]

  14. Fox News - Surprise, Surprise, Many Scientists Disagree On Global Warming (December 8, 2009) - [Archive]

  15. The Rush Limbaugh Show - GOP Must Fight Twin Hoaxes of Climate Change and Obamacare (December 9, 2009) - [Archive]

  16. Right Wing News - Why Can't We Question Man Made Global Warming? (December 9, 2009) - [Archive]

  17. John Birch Society - Climategate, "Scientific Fascism," and Copenhagen (December 10, 2009) - [Archive]

  18. American Enterprise Institute - Countering Kerry’s Catastrophic Climate Claims (December 11, 2009) - [Archive]

  19. The Washington Times - The tip of the Climategate iceberg (December 11, 2009) - [Archive]

  20. Mail Today - We need to take a hard look at climate change (December 11, 2009) - [Archive]

  21. U.S. Senator Roger Wicker - U.S. Should Not Sign Climate Pact Amid Economic Risks, Scientific Doubts (December 14, 2009) - [Archive]

  22. Cleveland Photography Examiner - Is the media a co-conspirator in the global warming deception? (December 15, 2009)

  23. Right Wing News - The Goracle's Crystal Ball Lets Him Down Yet Again (December 15, 2009) - [Archive]

  24. AgoraVox - Canulars du Réchauffement Climatique : la fonte des glaces polaires et la « hausse catastrophique » du niveau des mers (December 18, 2009) - [Archive]

  25. eigentümlich frei - Klimaerwärmung, Teil 3: Die Politik (December 18, 2009) - [Archive]

  26. Quadrant Magazine - Why Barry Jones is wrong (December 21, 2009) - [Archive]

  27. Idaho Press-Tribune - There's ample reason to doubt 'truth' of global warming (December 31, 2009) - [Archive]

  28. Arezki, Hacène (Ph.D.) - Climat, Mensonges et Propagande [Climate Lies and Propaganda] (2010) - [Archive]

  29. Carter, Robert M. (Ph.D.) - Climate: The Counter-consensus (2010) - [Archive]

  30. Uday India - Copenhagen or Flopenhagen? (January 2, 2010) - [Archive]

  31. Hastings & St. Leonards Observer - Climate change: the sceptics need a voice (January 11, 2010) - [Archive]

  32. Frontier Centre for Public Policy - Opportunism and Exploitation: Climate Change Activism and Hostility to Liberal Civilization (February 2010) - [Archive]

  33. Australian Environment Foundation - Lecture to Third-Year Engineering Students, UTS (February 26, 2010) - [Archive]

  34. European Institute for Climate and Energy - Brief an Umweltminister Roettgen als Nachtrag zum „Energiepolitischer Dialog der CDU /CSU Bundestagsfraktion“ vom 9.6.10 (July 12, 2010) - [Archive]

  35. The Border Mail - Find the truth before we pay (October 18, 2010) - [Archive]

  36. Hawaii Reporter - The Scandals of the Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change [tinyurl] (October 25, 2010) - [Archive]

  37. De Dagelijkse Standaard - Klimaatdiscussie en georchestreerde karaktermoord (November 3, 2010) - [Archive]

  38. eigentümlich frei - Bundestag: Die Grünen und die Grenzen der Allmacht (November 9, 2010) - [Archive]

  39. European Institute for Climate and Energy - Das ZDF- der Klimawandel- und die Wahrheit: Mit dem Zweiten diffamiert man besser! (December 8, 2010) - [Archive]

  40. Happs, John (Ph.D.) - Catastrophic Anthropogenic Global Warming. Consensus or Fraud? (2011) - [Archive]

  41. Science & Public Policy Institute - 850 Peer-Reviewed Papers Supporting Skepticism of "Man-Made" Global Warming (AGW) Alarm (January 15, 2011) - [Archive]

  42. Contrepoints - Réchauffement, la presse ne sait même plus désinformer (January 21, 2011) - [Archive]

  43. European Institute for Climate and Energy - In eigener Sache: PIK Professor Rahmstorf behauptet Klimarealisten würden "übliche wissenschaftliche Wege" meiden um Kritik anzumelden! (January 22, 2011) - [Archive]

  44. Contrepoints - La science au service de la raison (January 30, 2011) - [Archive]

  45. European Institute for Climate and Energy - Meinungsherrschaft über den Klimawandel (February 23, 2011) - [Archive]

  46. European Institute for Climate and Energy) - "Klimaschutz": Billionen für nichts! EU-Kommissarin Hedegaard gibt astronomischen Kapitalbedarf bekannt (February 27, 2011) - [Archive]

  47. eigentümlich frei - "Klimaschutz": Billionen für nichts (February 27, 2011) - [Archive]

  48. National Alliance Against Tolls - 450 Peer Reviewed Papers Supporting Skepticism of AGW-Caused Global Warming (May 14, 2011) - [Archive]

  49. Quadrant Magazine - The Critical Decade: Part I (May 30, 2011) - [Archive]

  50. European Institute for Climate and Energy - Klimaschutz und Energiewende: Aktuelle Gebote oder nachhaltige Irrwege? [tinyurl] (June 10, 2011) - [Archive]

  51. The Gisborne Herald - Concerted efforts to squash research that threatens Warmism (July 2, 2011) - [Archive]

  52. North County Times - Must warmers always resort to deflection? (September 28, 2011) - [Archive]

  53. Maastricht School of Management - How to Deal With the Dilemma of Anthropogenic Global Warming and the Natural Variability as Drivers for Climate Change (November 2011) - [Archive]

  54. Kansas State Collegian - Green genocide (November 10, 2011) - [Archive]

  55. European Institute for Climate and Energy - Vergangen oder aktuell? Der SPIEGEL warnte 1974 und 1977 vor einer drohenden Kaltzeitkatastrophe (January 31, 2012) - [Archive]

  56. 24.UNT - Ifrågasätt påståendet att människan påverkar klimatet (February 3, 2012) - [Archive]

  57. European Institute for Climate and Energy - Argumente der Skeptiker auf dem Prüfstand, eine Sendung des Bayerischen Fernsehens vom 3.Juni 2012 (June 7, 2012) - [Archive]

  58. Heartlander Magazine - Hillary Clinton Visits Wrong Place to Observe Global Warming (June 8, 2012) - [Archive]

  59. Carolina Journal - Balance Needed on Coverage of Sea Level Rise (June 15, 2012) - [Archive]

  60. Manassas Environmental News Examiner - Ignoring scientific facts, the UN attempts global governance coup at Rio + 20 (June 22, 2012) - [Archive]

  61. Energy & Environment - On the Public's Perception of Global Warming: Not as 'Dumb' as Some Believe (July 2012) - [Archive]

  62. UK Parliament Energy and Climate Change Committee - HC 517 The Economics of Wind Power: Memorandum submitted by Kes Heffer (WIND 60) (July 10, 2012) - [Archive]

  63. Manassas Environmental News Examiner - Conservative group at George Mason University pushes for U.S. carbon tax (July 14, 2012) - [Archive]

  64. Boston Environmental Policy Examiner - Global warming skeptics: witch-hunts in the 21st century (July 29, 2012) - [Archive]

  65. Boston Environmental Policy Examiner - New study dismantles Muller's BEST claims; half the warming trend artificial (July 30, 2012) - [Archive]

  66. European Institute for Climate and Energy - Eine unbequeme Wahrheit: Während der Kleinen Eiszeit waren die Stürme in Europa stärker als heute (August 8, 2012) - [Archive]

  67. Heartland Institute - Oreskes, the Queen of Climate Smear, ignores the big money, has no evidence, throws names (August 13, 2012) - [Archive]

  68. Boston Environmental Policy Examiner - Gore: Don't blame Bush for everything, then blames global warming for everything (August 30, 2012) - [Archive]

  69. Athens Patch - Man-Made Global Warming: Settled Science? (September 27, 2012) - [Archive]

  70. Principia Scientific International - The Greenhouse Gas Effect Is Bogus – Carbon Dioxide (CO2) Cools the Earth (December 2012) - [Archive]

  71. Gervais, Francois (Ph.D.) - L'Innocence du Carbone: L'effet de serre remis en question [The Innocence of Carbon: Greenhouse effect questioned] (2013)

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  73. McElroy, Wendy (Research Fellow) How to Lose a Climate Change Argument (March 5, 2013) - [Archive]

  74. Hufvudstadsbladet - Skeptiker godtar inte blint all information (March 22, 2013) - [Archive]

  75. SINTEF - Consensus and Controversy: The Debate on Man-Made Global Warming (April 2013) - [Archive]

  76. European Institute for Climate and Energy - Der Mythos vom wissenschaftlichen Konsens: Faktencheck von Schellnhubers „Drei bequeme Unwahrheiten“ (April 17, 2013) - [Archive]

  77. The New American - Climate "Consensus" Con Game: Desperate Effort Before Release of UN Report (May 22, 2013) - [Archive]

  78. European Institute for Climate and Energy - Das Umweltbundesamt - staatlich verordnete Klima-Doktrin (June 1, 2013) - [Archive]

  79. European Institute for Climate and Energy - Die betrügerische Studie von Cook über den „97%-Konsens“ ist ein Marketing-Trick, auf den einige Journalisten hereinfallen werden. (June 17, 2013) - [Archive]

  80. Western Journalism - Logical Fallacies and Global Warming Alarmism (July 13, 2013) - [Archive]

  81. Die Weltwoche - Skeptiker im Aufwind (September 25, 2013) - [Archive]

  82. The Dominion Post - The jury's out on climate change (September 19, 2013) - [Archive]

  83. Atlantico - Réchauffement climatique : le point sur ce qui est établi et ce qui ne l'est pas (September 17, 2013) - [Archive]

  84. Die Weltwoche - Skeptiker im Aufwind (September 25, 2013) - [Archive]

  85. Boston Environmental Policy Examiner - How to kill the scientific method the reddit way (December 18, 2013) - [Archive]

  86. European Institute for Climate and Energy - Vom Klimaschutz zur Energiewende: Notwendigkeit oder Irrweg? [tinyurl] (January 16, 2014) - [Archive]

  87. BarbWire - Ghost Hunters Meteorological: Seeking the Elusive Global Warming Ghost (February 20, 2014) - [Archive]

  88. Heartlander Magazine - John Kerry Sinks to Climate McCarthyism (February 24, 2014) - [Archive]

  89. TruthRevolt - Climate Change Crazies To WAPO: Stop Publishing Krauthammer's Global Warming 'Lies'​ (February 24, 2014) - [Archive]

  90. Alliance for Wise Energy Decisions - AWED Energy & Environmental Newsletter (March 3, 2014) - [Archive]

  91. Heartland Institute - John Kerry’s Climate Policy is the Same as Bloodletting: Patients are not Cured, and Sometimes Die (March 4, 2014) - [Archive]

  92. Media Research Center - COLD SHOULDER: ABC, CBS Exclude Scientists Critical of Global Warming for More Than 1,300 Days (March 6, 2014) - [Archive]

  93. NewsBusters - COLD SHOULDER: ABC, CBS Exclude Scientists Critical of Global Warming for More Than 1,300 Days (March 6, 2014) - [Archive]

  94. Clash Daily - Conservatives and Christians – the "Anti-Science" Idiots? (March 12, 2014) - [Archive]

  95. Heartlander Magazine - U.S. National Academy of Sciences Promoting Global Warming Scare (March 12, 2014) - [Archive]

  96. The Lakeland Times - 'Scientific Consensus' is an oxymoron (March 17, 2014) - [Archive]

  97. Northridge-Chatsworth Patch - Secrets of a "Global Warming Denier" (March 23, 2014) - [Archive]

  98. Institute for Energy Research - U.S. National Academy of Sciences: Doubling Down on Climate Alarmism (and taking science down a notch with it) (March 27, 2014) - [Archive]

  99. European Institute for Climate and Energy - Ein Anwalt fragt: können Klimaskeptiker legal der kriminellen Fahrlässigkeit angeklagt werden? (April 8, 2014) - [Archive]

  100. De Dagelijkse Standaard - De hoofdboodschap van 'De Twijfelbrigade' deugt niet (April 26, 2014) - [Archive]

  101. Heartland Institute - QPR Newsletter (Second Quarter, 2014) - [Archive]

  102. International Journal of Modern Physics B - Tiny warming of residual anthropogenic CO2 (May 2014) - [Archive]

  103. Heartlander Magazine - What 97 Percent of Climate Scientists Do (May 12, 2014) - [Archive]

  104. Heartland Institute - Research & Commentary: The Myth of a Global Warming Consensus (May 14, 2014) - [Archive]

  105. European Institute for Climate and Energy - Energiewende und Klimaschutz: Aus Sicht eines Naturwissenschaftlers [tinyurl] (June 13, 2014) - [Archive]

  106. The Washington Times - 9th International Conference on Climate Change (June 26, 2014) - [Archive]

  107. Web Commentary - What 97 Percent of Climate Scientists Do (June 29, 2014) - [Archive]

  108. Media Research Center - Media Praise BBC Censorship of Climate Skeptics; Attack Dissenters (July 8, 2014) - [Archive]

  109. NewsBusters - Media Praise BBC Censorship of Climate Skeptics; Attack Dissenters (July 8, 2014) - [Archive]

  110. The Huffington Post (Canada) - Changement climatique: l'inquisition verte (July 12, 2014) - [Archive]

  111. European Institute for Climate and Energy - Meine Tage im Hass (FAZ) (July 15, 2014) - [Archive]

  112. The General Science Journal - Archibald Roy, the astronomers and the global warming (August, 2014) - [Archive]

  113. La Météorologie - Commentaire sur « Lu pour vous : L'Innocence du carbone » (August 2014) - (PDF) [Archive]

  114. European Institute for Climate and Energy - Klimaerwärmung (December 9, 2014) - [Archive]

  115. Gray, Vincent R. (Ph.D.) - The Global Warming Scam and the Climate Change Superscam (2015) - [Archive]

  116. Martingano, Salvatore (D.C.) - The Declaration of Dependence: A Betrayal of the American Dream (2015) - [Archive]

  117. NIPCC - Why Scientists Disagree about Global Warming: The NIPCC Report on Scientific Consensus (2015) - [Archive]

  118. European Institute for Climate and Energy - Nachhaltige Wahrheiten vs. Lügenpresse (January 20, 2015) - [Archive]

  119. The News Herald - Climate change debate continues (February 6, 2015) - [Archive]

  120. Association of French-Speaking Climate-Optimists - Le climat "Grande Cause Nationale", Vraiment? (February 12, 2015) - [Archive]

  121. ProCon.org - Is Human Activity Primarily Responsible for Global Climate Change? (June 8, 2015) - [Archive]

  122. North Carolina State University - Climate of Doubt in North Carolina: Sea Level Rise, Economic Interests, and the Media (March 16, 2015) - [Archive]

  123. Earth-Science Reviews - Anthropogenic CO2 warming challenged by 60-year cycle (April 2016) [Archive]

60 comments:

  1. Thanks for the compilation.

    Additional peer reviewed papers supporting skepticism about global warming policies:

    Goklany, IM. Global public health: Global warming in perspective. Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons 14: 69-75 (2009). At http://www.jpands.org/vol14no3/goklany.pdf

    Goklany, IM. Is Climate Change the "Defining Challenge of Our Age"? Energy & Environment 20(3): 279-302 (2009). At http://goklany.org/library/Goklany%202009%20EE%2020-3_1.pdf

    Goklany, IM. “Integrated Strategies to Reduce Vulnerability and Advance Adaptation, Mitigation, and Sustainable Development,” Mitigation and Adaption Strategies for Global Change DOI 10.1007/s11027-007-9098-1 (2007). At http://goklany.org/library/Goklany-IAM2007.pdf

    Goklany IM. “Relative Contributions of Global Warming to Various Climate Sensitive Risks, and Their Implications for Adaptation and Mitigation,” Energy & Environment 14: 797-822 (2003). At http://goklany.org/library/E&E%20final%20from%20Goklany%20RV%20preprint.pdf

    Goklany, IM. “Potential Consequences of Increasing Atmospheric CO2 Concentration Compared to Other Environmental Problems.” Technology 7S (2000): 189-213. At http://goklany.org/library/Goklany%202000%20Technology.pdf

    Goklany IM, and Straja SR. “U.S. Death Rates due to Extreme Heat and Cold Ascribed to Weather, 1979-1997.” Technology 7S (2000): 165-173.

    Goklany, IM. “Strategies to Enhance Adaptability: Technological Change, Economic Growth and Free Trade.” Climatic Change 30 (1995): 427-449. At http://goklany.org/library/Goklany%201995%20Climatic%20Change.pdf

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  2. Thank you, I have added them.

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  3. Excellent resource! Thanks for working this up!

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  4. Thank You. This is a terrific resource. Really appreciate what you have done.

    Would it be OK if I link to this on the Christmas cards and Christmas wrapping paper that I use personally?

    People seem to need to actually "SEE" that the discussion is vibrant and ongoing with their own eyes.

    They just cannot "HEAR" dissenting words if you "speak" about another point of view.

    Thank you again for collating these works.

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  5. Please let as many people know about it as possible, that is why I made it.

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  6. Great work, many thanks!

    I have distributed your list on my German Science Skeptical Blog.

    I would also like to add that the paper:
    Glacial geological evidence for the medieval warm period
    (Climatic Change, Volume 26, Numbers 2-3, pp. 143-169, March 1994)
    - Jean M. Grove, Roy Switsur

    is available as PDF on Google Books.

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  7. I have added a PDF link for that paper, thanks.

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  8. Yep! Looks like a consensus to me. LMAO!!!

    DoctorJJ

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  9. Excellent. You can add, if you'd be so kind:

    Problems with publishing scientific information on the web: how unusual were temperatures in Svalbard, Norway?, Energy & Environment, Volume 18, Number 1, January 2007 , pp. 109-121
    - Eschenbach, W.

    Climate-change effect on Lake Tanganyika? Brief Communications Arising, Nature 430, (15 July 2004)
    - Eschenbach, W.

    Tuvalu Not Experiencing Increased Sea Level Rise, Energy & Environment, Volume 15, Number 3, 1 July 2004 , pp. 527-543
    - Eschenbach, W.

    Willis Eschenbach

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  10. Hi Andrew!

    I've compared your listing with the science references on the latest UNEP publication « The 2009 Climate Change Science Compendium» published on September 22 with the purpose of filling the gap of published climate research between the IPCC AR-4 of 2007 and the AR5 due to be released in 2014.

    The numbers come out as follows:

    The UNEP report:

    A total of 376 scientific papers (not including references to Institutional Reports) out of which 316 papers refer to the period 2007-2009.

    The Popular Technology listing:

    A total of 438 papers (not including references to Institutional Reports) out of which 133 papers refer to the period 2007-2009.

    I’ve compared these listings in order to establish if any of the AGW-critical papers have been included in the UNEP publication’s scientific paper references.

    And I’ve found None! Nada! What I’ve only found are the names of a handful of scientists (I’ve counted to nine) that appear on both “sides” of the “issue-fence”.

    This is unfortunately a potential proof of the action of an “invisible hand” or “cherry-picking” that is deliberately excluding opposite viewpoints and also excluding the “voice of” maybe hundreds of scientists. The total absence of recent AGW-critical papers in the UNEP-report can not be explained by “hazard”. The numbers are too large.

    I've written a letter to the UNEP Executive Director which you can view here (it's too long for your comment system)
    http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/17475

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  11. Very valuable - in many ways, and for years to come...

    Please consider assisting users by listing the references alphabetically by author.
    In addition, a quick way of viewing them chronologically would help many sleuths to continue the good work. Do librarians have the answer to doing both on line?

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  12. It is sorted alphabetically per category with the exception of the Hockey Stick and Cosmic Ray section (both are chronological). I have no plans on reordering them.

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  13. I am a librarian. We are snowed in here in Minnesota, and I just found your list. Had been looking for one.

    If I were sorting it I would put it in an Excel document, with each author in a separate cell. (These documents should all be in the Library of Congress catalog.)

    As the list stands, you can use Edit on your browser (top left corner). The last item in the Edit column is Find on Page. Type in a last name and the cursor will lead you through the document.

    Remember, computers aren't smart. They only look for matches to what you tell them to look for.

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  14. Also Ctrl+F will bring up the find box to search the list.

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  15. Wow! Just what the PhD ordered. Thank you, thank you, thank you. this is a gold-mine, a true treasure trove!

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  16. Dear Sir,
    I have found 193 papers (2003+) on co2science.org, standing for the existence of a medieval warm period, and also added 6 more papers for 2010. I wrote an article; are you interested - infact it is in german.

    Wishes,
    Jürgen

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  17. Jürgen,

    Thank you, I am aware of them and may add them if I have time. The ones I added are either frequently discussed or are titled obviously. Feel free to post the link to your article.

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  18. Dear Andrew,
    I`ve seen that you only added about 25 papers on the MWP. I have added on my blog about 230 studies.

    http://mittelalterlichewarmperiode.blogspot.com

    Best wishes,
    Anonym

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  19. You could add this one linking Asian Monsoon cycles to changes in solar activity:

    Coherence between solar activity and the East Asian winter monsoon
    variability in the past 8000 years from Yangtze River-derived mud in
    the East China Sea

    http://www.meas.ncsu.edu/sealevel/publications/Xiao_3Paleo_2006.pdf

    ReplyDelete
  20. You could add this one linking Asian Monsoon cycles to changes in solar activity:


    Coherence between solar activity and the East Asian winter monsoon
    variability in the past 8000 years from Yangtze River-derived mud in
    the East China Sea

    http://www.meas.ncsu.edu/sealevel/publications/Xiao_3Paleo_2006.pdf

    ReplyDelete
  21. Could you make a bibtex file of the papers available?

    ReplyDelete
  22. Great site! Keep up the good work!

    Cheers

    Roger

    http://www.rogerfromnewzealand.wordpress.com

    ReplyDelete
  23. Are you sure this should be on the list?
    Oreskes et al. (2008) - "From Chicken Little to Dr. Pangloss: William Nierenberg, Global Warming, and the Social Deconstruction of Scientific Knowledge"

    ReplyDelete
  24. That paper is not on the list. The section you are looking at is, "Rebuttals to Published Papers".

    That listing is the original paper that the rebuttal paper is referring to,

    The rebuttal paper in this case is,

    Early Climate Change Consensus at the National Academy: The Origins and Making of Changing Climate (PDF)
    (Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences, Volume 40, Number 3, pp. 318–349, 2010)
    - Nicolas Nierenberg, Walter R. Tschinkel, Victoria J. Tschinkel

    Technically I am not counting any of those listed under this section anyway.

    ReplyDelete
  25. Thanks for compiling this list.

    ReplyDelete
  26. I don't see either of these on your list:


    1. Karleskind, P. et al , 2011, Subduction of carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen in the northeast Atlantic.., Journal of Geophysical Research, 116

    This one finds found that North Atlantic oceanic currents play a greater role in the absorption of carbon than previously thought by the IPCC report

    2. Bounoua L., F. G. Hall, P. J. Sellers, A. Kumar, G. J. Collatz, C. J. Tucker, and M. L. Imhoff ,2010, Quantifying the negative feedback of vegetation to greenhouse warming: A modeling approach, Geophysical Research Letters , 37

    This one finds that the doubling of the Carbon Dioxide concentration may be less serious than the IPCC predicts

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  27. Andrew et al,
    Thank you very much for your time and effort in compiling this list. It was exactly the type of resource I wished to reference.
    Regards,
    Ardeet

    ReplyDelete
  28. Great list, and great work in preparing this compilation. I fully suspect though, that the warmists will quickly dismiss this list and say that none of these are peer reviewed - as they feel that they are the only ones capable of being "peers".

    ReplyDelete
  29. Very useful. I was linked to this by a Blog which alleges that most if not all tehse authors are "funded" by Exxon Mobil. How many of their warmist rivals are NOT funded by governments committed to their ideology?

    ReplyDelete
  30. Hello Andrew

    Thanks for that superb list! I really appreciate that!

    Here I have another 450 papers for you I found at
    http://www.klimaskeptiker.info/index.php?seite=studien.php

    I only compared them roughly with your list. Some are already listed, some are not. Since I have a very time-consuming job, I'm unfortunatelly not able to sort them.

    Will be a long weekend for you. :-)

    Anyway, you're doing a fine and respectable work here. Thumbs up!

    Greetings from Germany

    ReplyDelete
  31. Creepy, that is an old outdated version of my list from two years ago. There is nothing to combine, only use the current 900 version seen here.

    ReplyDelete
  32. Dear Sir.
    It would be interesting to put the list into Excel, because only I have a list of over 150 articles (refereed journals, peer review) of which 50% are not on your list. if the list was a spreadsheet would be easier to check the items missing.
    Rogerio Maestri

    ReplyDelete
  33. If you email me your list I will look at it.

    ReplyDelete
  34. Thank you for this. I freely admit a bias towards the "other side", but my bias is not sufficient to simply let me take "they're all in bed with Exxon" or "it's a settled matter" as an answer, anymore than I'm likely to be swayed by the cartoonish antics of many of the "deniers". I'm always on the lookout for facts that I can examine myself, and while not being a scientist much of this will probably go over my head, it will at least give me a jumping off point for putting much of what I hear in context.

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  35. Could you number them?

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  36. There is no easy way to do that without using a spreadsheet or database as the list is dynamic and changes.

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  37. http://forecast.mssl.ucl.ac.uk/docs/Lloyd-Hughes%2BSaunders.pdf

    Here is an important one about drought.

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  38. There is an experiment that proves that the Greenhouse gas effect does not exist. This experiment which has been peer reviewed by Ph.D physicists . Ph.D. Chemical engineers and others. The experiment is found on the web-site http:// www.slayingtheskydragon.com click on the blog tab. It is titled "The Experiment that failed which can save the world trillion-Proving the greenhouse gas effect does not exist

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  39. Hi Andrew,

    Thought you might want to add these papers to your list in the solar section:

    http://www.academicjournals.org/IJPS/PDF/Pdf2006/Oct/El-Borie%20and%20Al-Thoyaib.pdf

    http://www.nonlin-processes-geophys.net/18/251/2011/npg-18-251-2011.pdf

    ReplyDelete
  40. Hi Andrew,
    Thought you could update list with this paper on Effects of industrial wind turbine noise on sleep and health
    The study proves noise emissions from IWTs disturb sleep & impair mental health:
    http://www.noiseandhealth.org/article.asp?issn=1463-1741;year=2012;volume=14;issue=60;spage=237;epage=243;aulast=Nissenbaum
    Cheers
    Jamie

    ReplyDelete
  41. Jamie, thank you for the paper and I added it to my other list that covers green energy,

    Peer-Reviewed Papers Supporting Skeptic Arguments Against "Green" Energy

    ReplyDelete
  42. Hi Andrew,
    Paper you may have, but couldn't find on "The phase relation between atmospheric carbon dioxide and global temperature"

    CO2 lagging temp change, which really turns the entire AGW argument on its head:

    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921818112001658

    Highlights:
    ► Changes in global atmospheric CO2 are lagging 11–12 months behind changes in global sea surface temperature ► Changes in atmospheric CO2 are not tracking changes in human emissions.

    Cheers,
    Jamie

    ReplyDelete
  43. New paper shows global warming decreases storm activity and extreme weather

    http://hockeyschtick.blogspot.com/2014/01/new-paper-shows-global-warming.html

    Cheers,
    Jamie

    http://climatism.wordpress.com/

    ReplyDelete
  44. Jamie, I will add them in the next update. If you want, you can just email them in the future to: populartechnology@gmail(dot)com

    ReplyDelete
  45. I notice that PT has today, once again, been kicked off andthentheresphysics blog. Their massive over reaction to any inoffensive comment that is against AGW is an indication of their insecurity. The global warming scare is dying because the science behind it is just junk. Keep up the good work.

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  46. cleanwater,

    The greenhouse gas "effect" has been disproved as early as 1909 by Robert W. Wood's experiment and even three occasions after Wood's experiment.

    http://hockeyschtick.blogspot.com/2010/06/greenhouse-theory-disproven-in-1909.html

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  47. Andrew, I believe you meant to say "UAH" when you said "UHA" when describing where John Christy works in a rebuttal to the common criticism, "There are no papers on the list that argue against AGW."

    ReplyDelete
  48. Thank you, that typo has been corrected.

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  49. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  50. 1. When you click on the abstract link for the article, "Response to Comment on Reconstructing Past Climate from Noisy Data" - the side menu has an option for "Full Text" and "Full Text (PDF)".

    2. It is not clear from Nature if "Scientific" Correspondence articles are peer-reviewed - http://www.nature.com/nature/authors/gta/others.html#correspondence

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  51. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  52. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  53. McKitrick et al. (2010) is a standalone paper and is already included on the list. I do not consider it a supplemental paper to Douglass et al. (2007) even though it can be used as a rebuttal to Santer et al. (2008).

    I am also well aware the AGU should hire a competent webmaster.

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  54. Excellently encompassing a large number of points of view to portray the true nature of the academic complexity of this unrecognized claim at the level of a Nobel-Prize in science, as it is expected for any comprehensively-investigated scientific issue. This is evidence of the need of Congress to initiate a hearing process with legitimate scientists.
    Jimmy Vigo, PhD Environmental Toxicology, Pharmaceutical Chemist, College Chemistry Professor. El Paso, TX.

    ReplyDelete
  55. It would be nice if you would update this list with papers published after 2013.

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  56. A quick [Ctrl F] search doesn't come up with a criticism of the IPCC's Global Warming Potential (GWP) numbers primarily as they relate to methane.

    The GWP numbers are specifically designed to inflate the role of methane. Why? Because of all the compounds and their GWP numbers listed in the various appendices of the 5 IPCC reports, methane is the only one with a gram formula weight (GFW) less than carbon dioxide. The IPCC's GWP number is larger if the GFW is less than that of CO2.

    Steve Case
    Milwaukee, WI

    ReplyDelete
  57. Wouldn't the "climate change deniers" be the people who are trying to stop the climate from changing?

    ReplyDelete