AK This Bibliography May Seem Long (More Than 3000 Items), but It Has a Great Many Omissions. the IPCC

AK This Bibliography May Seem Long (More Than 3000 Items), but It Has a Great Many Omissions. the IPCC

THIS IS THE TEXT OF AN ESSAY IN THE WEB SITE “THE DISCOVERY OF GLOBAL WARMING” BY SPENCER WEART, HTTP://WWW.AIP.ORG/HISTORY/CLIMATE. AUGUST 2021. HYPERLINKS WITHIN THAT SITE ARE NOT INCLUDED IN THIS FILE. FOR AN OVERVIEW SEE THE BOOK OF THE SAME TITLE (HARVARD UNIV. PRESS, REV. ED. 2008). COPYRIGHT © 2003-2021 SPENCER WEART & AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF PHYSICS. Bibliography Part I: A-K This bibliography may seem long (more than 3000 items), but it has a great many omissions. The IPCC reports have by far the most complete bibliography for recent scientific work. Nearly all, but not all, of the items below are referenced somewhere in these essays. Abbreviations used in the notes in the essays: AIP: Niels Bohr Library at the American Institute of Physics, College Park, MD LDEO: Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Palisades, NY SIO: Scripps Institution of Oceanography Archives, La Jolla, CA Abarbanel, Albert, and Thomas McCluskey (1950). “Is the World Getting Warmer?” Saturday Evening Post 223, (1 July), pp. 22-23, 57-63. Abbott, Benjamin W., et al. (2016). “Biomass Offsets Little or None of Permafrost Carbon Release from Soils, Streams, and Wildfire: An Expert Assessment.” Environmental Research Letters 11: 034014 [doi:10.1088-1748-9326-11-3-034014]. Abbot, Charles G., and F.E. Fowle, Jr. (1908). “Income and Outgo of Heat from the Earth, and the Dependence of Its Temperature Thereon.” Annals of the Astrophysical Observatory (Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC) 2: 159-176. Abbot, Charles G., and F.E. Fowle, Jr. (1913). “Volcanoes and Climate.” Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections 60: 1-24. Abbot, Charles G. (1967). “Precipitation in Five Continents.” Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections 151. Abelmann, Andrea , et al. (2006). “Extensive Phytoplankton Blooms in the Atlantic Sector of the Glacial Southern Ocean.” Paleoceanography 21: PA1013 [doi:10.1029/2005PA001199, 2006]. Abelson, P.H. (1977). “Energy and Climate.” Science 197: 941. Abe-Ouchi, Ayako, et al. (2013). “Insolation-Driven 100,000-Year Glacial Cycles and Hysteresis of Ice-Sheet Volume.” Nature 500: 190-93 [doi:10.1038/nature12374]. Abel, Guy J., et al. (2019). “Climate, Conflict and Forced Migration.” Global Environmental Change 54: 239-49 [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2018.12.003]. Abetti, Giorgio (1957). The Sun. New York: Macmillan. Weart DGW 8/21 Bibl I p. 2 Abraham, J.P., et al. (2013). “A Review of Global Ocean Temperature Observations: Implications for Ocean Heat Content Estimates and Climate Change.” Reviews of Geophysics 51 450-83 [doi: 10.1002/rog.20022]. Achermann, Dania (2020). “Vertical Glaciology: The Second Discovery of the Third Dimension in Climate Research.” Centaurus 62: 720-43 [doi.org/10.1111/1600-0498.12294], online at https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/1600-0498.12294. Ackerman, Andrew S., et al. (2000). “Effects of Aerosols on Cloud Albedo: Evaluation of Twomey’s Parameters of Cloud Susceptibility Using Measurements of Ship Tracks.” J. Atmospheric Sciences 57: 2684-95. Adabashev, I. (1966). Global Engineering. Moscow: Progress. Adem, Julian (1965). “Experiments Aiming at Monthly and Seasonal Numerical Weather Prediction.” Monthly Weather Review 93: 495-503. Adler, Jerry (2007). “Moment of Truth.” Newsweek (April 16), pp. 45-48. Ager, Derek (1993). The New Catastrophism: The Importance of the Rare Event in Geological History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Agrawala, Shardul (1997). Explaining the Evolution of the IPCC Structure and Process. ENRP Discussion Paper E-97-05,, Cambridge, MA, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. Agrawala, Shardul (1998a). “Context and Early Origins of the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change.” Climatic Change 39: 605-20. Agrawala, Shardul (1998b). “Structural and Process History of the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change.” Climatic Change 39: 621-42. Agrawala, Shardul (1999a). “Early Science-Policy Interactions in Global Climate Change: Lessons from the Advisory Group on Greenhouse Gases.” Global Environmental Change 9: 157-69. Agrawala, Shardul (1999b). Science Advisory Mechanisms in Multilateral Decisionmaking: Three Models from the Global Climate Change Regime. Diss., Princeton University: Ahlmann, H.W. (1952). “Glacier Variations and Climatic Fluctuations.” Bowman Memorial Lectures, American Geographical Society Ser. 3, no. 1. Ahmed, Moinuddin, et al. (2013). “Continental-Scale Temperature Variability During the Past Two Millennia.” Nature Geoscience 6: 339-46 [doi:10.1038/ngeo1797]. Weart DGW 8/21 Bibl I p. 3 Ai, Xuyuan E., et al. (2020). “Southern Ocean Upwelling, Earth’s Obliquity, and Glacial- Interglacial Atmospheric CO2 Change “ Science 370: 1348-52 [doi:10.1126/science.abd2115]. Aitken, A. R. A., et al. (2016). “Repeated Large-Scale Retreat and Advance of Totten Glacier Indicated by Inland Bed Erosion.” Nature 533: 385-89 [doi:10.1038/nature17447]. Albrecht, Bruce A. (1989). “Aerosols, Cloud Microphysics, and Fractional Cloudiness.” Science 245: 1227-30. Aldrich, L.B., and W.H. Hoover (1954). “Annals of the Astrophysical Observatory, Smithsonian Institution 7: 1-184. Alexander, Tom (1974). “Ominous Changes in the World’s Weather.” Fortune 89, no. 2 (Feb.), pp. 90-95, 142-52. Allen, M. (2003). “Liability for Climate Change.” Nature 421: 891-892 [doi:10.1038/421891a]. Allen, M.R., et al. (2006). “Quantifying Anthropogenic Influence on Recent near-Surface Temperature Change.” Surveys in Geophysics 27: 491-544 [doi:10.1007/s10712-006- 9011-6]. Allen, Myles R., et al. (2009). “Warming Caused by Cumulative Carbon Emissions Towards the Trillionth Tonne.” Nature 458: 1163-66 [doi:10.1038/nature08019]. Allen, Robert J., and Steven C. Sherwood (2008). “Warming Maximum in the Tropical Upper Troposphere Deduced from Thermal Wind.” Nature Geoscience 1: 399 403 [doi:10.1038/ngeo208]. Alley, Richard B., et al. (1993). “Abrupt Increase in Snow Accumulation at the End of the Younger Dryas Event.” Nature 362: 527-29. Alley, Richard B., et al. (1995). “Comparison of Deep Ice Cores.” Nature 373: 393-94. Alley, Richard B. (1998). “Palaeoclimatology: Icing the North Atlantic.” Nature 392: 335-37. Alley, Richard B., and Peter U. Clark (1999). “The Deglaciation of the Northern Hemisphere: A Global Perspective.” Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences 27: 149-82 Alley, Richard B. (2000). The Two-Mile Time Machine. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Alley, R.B., et al. (2003). “Abrupt Climate Change.” Science 299: 205-10 [doi:10.1126/science.1081056]. Weart DGW 8/21 Bibl I p. 4 Alley, Richard B., et al. (2005). “Ice-Sheet and Sea-Level Changes.” Science 310: 456-60 [doi:10.1126/science.1114613]. Alley, Richard B., et al. (2020). “Twenty-First Century Sea-Level Rise Could Exceed IPCC Projections for Strong-Warming Futures.” One Earth 3: 691-703 [doi.org/10.1016/j.oneear.2020.11.002]. Alvarez, Luis W., et al. (1980). “Extraterrestrial Cause for the Cretaceous-Tertiary Extinction.” Science 208: 1095-1108. Alvarez, Ramón A., et al. (2018). “Assessment of Methane Emissions from the U.S. Oil and Gas Supply Chain.” Science 361: 186-88 [doi:10.1126/science.aar7204] Alvarez, Walter, et al. (1984). “The End of the Cretaceous: Sharp Boundary or Gradual Transition?” Science 223: 1183-86. American Geophysical Union (1999). “Position Statement Adopted on Climate Change and Greenhouse Gases.” Eos, Transactions of the American Geophysical Union 80: 49. American Meteorological Society (2013). “Explaining Extreme Events of 2012 from a Climate Perspective, Special Supplement.” Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society Vol. 94, No. 9. American Meteorological Society (Herring, S. C., et al., eds.) (2018). “Explaining Extreme Events of 2016 from a Climate Perspective.” Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 99: S1-S157, online at https://www.ametsoc.org/ams/index.cfm/publications/bulletin-of-the-american- meteorological-society-bams/explaining-extreme-events-from-a-climate-perspective/. American Psychological Association, Task Force on the Interface Between Psychology and Global Climate Change (2010). Psychology and Global Climate Change: Addressing a Multi-Faceted Phenomenon and Set of Challenges. http://www.apa.org/science/about/publications/climate-change.aspx. Anagnostou, Eleni, et al. (2016). “Changing Atmospheric CO2 Concentration Was the Primary Driver of Early Cenozoic Climate.” Nature 533: 380-84 [doi:10.1038/nature17423]. Anderegg, William R. L., et al. (2010). “Expert Credibility in Climate Change.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 107 [doi:10.1073/pnas.1003187107]. Anderegg, William R. L., et al. (2015). “Tropical Nighttime Warming as a Dominant Driver of Variability in the Terrestrial Carbon Sink.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112: 15591-96 [doi:10.1073/pnas.1521479112]. Anderegg, William R. L., et al. (2021). “Anthropogenic Climate Change Is Worsening North Weart DGW 8/21 Bibl I p. 5 American Pollen Seasons.” Publications of the National Academy of Sciences 118: e2013284118 [doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2013284118]. Anderson, Christopher (1992). “How Much Green in the Greenhouse?” Nature 356: 369. Anderson, Neil R., and Alexander Malahoff (1977) The Fate of Fossil Fuel CO2 in the Oceans. New York: Plenum. Anderson, Theodore L., et al. (2003). “Climate Forcing by Aerosols -- a Hazy Picture.” Science 300: 1103-04. Andersson, G. (1902). “Hasseln I Sverige Fordom Och Nu.” Sveriges Geoliska Undersökning, Afhand C2. Andreae, Meinrat O. (1996). “Raising Dust in the Greenhouse.” Nature 380: 389-90. Andreae, Meinrat O. (2001). “The Dark

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