twostrokenut
Well-Known Member
CO2 levels rising follow temp spikes, not the other way around. Got your umbrella out?You don't know very much. You are more than 130 years behind in understanding. Let me at least get you up to 1896.
https://www.aip.org/history/climate/co2.htm
Greenhouse Speculations: Arrhenius and Chamberlin
The next major scientist to consider the Earth's temperature was another man with broad interests, Svante Arrhenius in Stockholm. He too was attracted by the great riddle of the prehistoric ice ages, and he saw CO2 as the key. Why focus on that rare gas rather than water vapor, which was far more abundant? Because the level of water vapor in the atmosphere fluctuated daily, whereas the level of CO2 was set over a geological timescale by emissions from volcanoes. If the emissions changed, the alteration in the CO2 greenhouse effect would only slightly change the global temperature—but that would almost instantly change the average amount of water vapor in the air, which would bring further change through its own greenhouse effect. Thus the level of CO2 acted as a regulator of water vapor, and ultimately determined the planet’s long-term equilibrium temperature.