Awareness of Human-Caused Climate Change
Explore the changes in human awareness of climate change from 1824 to today.
Since the Industrial Revolution, additional greenhouse gas emissions have increased global temperatures by about 1.1°C (2°F). Even if that temperature shift does not sound extreme for a planet, consider that the human-driven increase is enough to melt sea ice and cause extreme weather events, among other effects. A few elevated degrees have already done significant damage.
But these observations of greenhouse gas emissions and the climate crisis are contemporary. When and how did humans begin noticing their activity was harming the environment and climate? Let’s look at a timeline of changes in human awareness of climate change over the past two hundred years.
Greenhouse Effect Discovered
Carbon Dioxide Is Revealed to Be a Greenhouse Gas
Global Warming Is First Hypothesized
Global Warming Is First Observed
The Keeling Curve Reveals Rising CO2 Levels
Edward Teller Warns the Energy Industry
Scientists Sound the Alarm to the President
First Computer Climate Models Predict More Warming
Scientists Predict Sea Level Rise
The Term Global Warming is Coined
James Black Warns Exxon About Global Warming
Ice Core Studies Confirm Global Warming
A Hole in the Ozone Layer is Discovered
The IPCC is Born
Climate Change Predicted to Threaten Coral Reefs
Attribution Science is Born
Scientists Discover Global Warming is Worse at the Poles
Tipping Points Discovered
IPCC Warns of Catastrophic Sea Level Rise
Scientists Warn of Mass Extinction
IPCC Predicts Irreversible Climate Damage By 2040