Temperature changes vary over the globe. Since 1979, land temperatures have increased about twice as fast as ocean temperatures (0.25 °C per decade against 0.13 °C per decade).Ocean temperatures increase more slowly than land temperatures because of the larger effective heat capacity of the oceans and because the ocean loses more heat by evaporation.The
Northern Hemisphere warms faster than the
Southern Hemisphere because it has more land and because it has extensive areas of seasonal snow and sea-ice cover subject to the
ice-albedo feedback. Although more greenhouse gases are emitted in the Northern than Southern Hemisphere this does not contribute to the difference in warming because the major greenhouse gases persist long enough to mix between hemispheres.
The
thermal inertia of the oceans and slow responses of other indirect effects mean that climate can take centuries or longer to adjust to changes in forcing.
Climate commitment studies indicate that even if greenhouse gases were stabilized at 2000 levels, a further warming of about 0.5 °C (0.9 °F) would still occur.
The greenhouse effect is the process by which
absorption and emission of
infrared radiation by gases in the
atmosphere warm a
planet's lower atmosphere and surface.
Fossil fuel burning has produced about three-quarters of the increase in CO2 from human activity over the past 20 years. Most of the rest is due to land-use change, particularly
deforestation.
The destruction of
stratospheric ozone by
chlorofluorocarbons is sometimes mentioned in relation to global warming. Although there are a few
areas of linkage, the relationship between the two is not strong. Reduction of stratospheric ozone has a cooling influence, but substantial ozone depletion did not occur until the late 1970s.
Tropospheric ozone contributes to surface warming.
Url: blog.lib.umn.edu/ellis271/arch1701/bigstockphoto_Global_Warming_217540%203.jpg(picture) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_warming(word)