Oman Daily Observer

GLOBAL WARMING

- — IANS

Although climate change has become a major concern in recent years, new research has found that clear signs of global warming emerged as early as 1940s in parts of South East Asia, Australia, and Africa.

The reason the first changes in average temperatur­e and temperatur­e extremes appeared in the tropics was because those regions generally experience­d a much narrower range of temperatur­es, the study said.

This meant smaller shifts temperatur­e record due to warming were more easily seen.

The first signal to appear in the tropics was the change in average temperatur­es. Later extreme temperatur­e events showed a global warming signal, the study noted.

“We examined average and extreme temperatur­es because they were always projected to be the measure that is most sensitive to global warming,” said lead study author Andrew King from in the global Australian Research Council’s Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science.

“Remarkably our research shows that you could already see clear signs of global warming in the tropics by the 1960s but in parts of Australia, South East Asia and Africa it was visible as early as the 1940s,” King noted.

Closer to the poles the emergence of climate change in the temperatur­e record appeared later but by the period 1980-2000 the temperatur­e record in most regions of the world were showing clear global warming signals. One of the few exceptions to this clear global warming signal was found in large parts of the continenta­l US, particular­ly on the Eastern coast and up through the central states.

These regions have yet to manifest obvious warming signals according to the models but it is expected they will appear in the next decade, said the researcher­s who analysed different climate models for their research.

The study was published in the journal Environmen­tal Research Letters.

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