What’s Natural
By Jim Steele
Original link: https://wattsupwiththat.com/2019/04/04/the-little-ice-age-back-to-the-future/?fbclid=IwAR20VdNKh0G3M3sr47CPnbTbdo8eaXhLOcqZifFgBmWpuJcQMmdUKppzxv0
Extreme scientists and politicians warn we will suffer catastrophic
climate change if the earth’s average temperature rises 2.7°F above the
Little Ice Age average. They claim we are in a climate crisis because
average temperature has already warmed by 1.5°F since 1850 AD. Guided by
climate fear, politicians fund whacky engineering schemes to shade the
earth with mirrors or aerosols to lower temperatures. But the cooler
Little Ice Age endured a much more disastrous climate.
The Little Ice Age coincides with the pre-industrial period. The
Little Ice Age spanned a period from 1300 AD to 1850 AD, but the exact
timing varies. It was a time of great droughts, retreating tree lines,
and agricultural failures leading to massive global famines and rampant
epidemics. Meanwhile advancing glaciers demolished European villages and
farms and extensive sea ice blocked harbors and prevented trade.
Dr. Michael Mann who preaches dire predictions wrought by global
warming described the Little Ice Age as a period of widespread “famine,
disease, and increased child mortality in Europe during the 17th–19th
century, probably related, at least in part, to colder temperatures and
altered weather conditions.” In contrast to current models suggesting
global warming will cause wild weather swings, Mann concluded “the Little Ice Age may have been more significant in terms of increased variability of the climate”.
Indeed, historical documents from the Little Ice Age describe wild
climate swings with extremely cold winters followed by very warm
summers, and cold wet years followed by cold dry years.
A series of Little Ice Age droughts lasting several decades
devastated Asia between the mid 1300s and 1400s. Resulting famines
caused significant societal upheaval within India, China, Sri Lanka, and
Cambodia. Bad weather resulted in the Great Famine of 1315-1317 which
decimated Europe causing extreme levels of crime, disease, mass death,
cannibalism and infanticide. The North American tree-ring data reveal
megadroughts lasting several decades during the cool 1500s. The
Victorian Great Drought from 1876 to 1878 brought great suffering across
much of the tropics with India devastated the most. More than 30 million people are thought to have died at this time from famine worldwide.
The Little Ice Age droughts and famines forced great societal
upheaval, and the resulting climate change refugees were forced to seek
better lands. But those movements also spread horrendous epidemics. Wild
climate swings brought cold and dry weather to central Asia. That
forced the Mongols to search for better grazing. As they invaded new
territories they spread the Bubonic plague which had devastated parts of
Asia earlier. In the 1300s the Mongols passed the plague to Italian
merchant ships who then brought it to Europe where it quickly killed one
third of Europe’s population. European explorers looking for new trade
routes brought smallpox to the Americas, causing small native tribes to
go extinct and decimating 25% to 50% of larger tribes. Introduced
diseases rapidly reduced Mexico’s population from 30 million to 3
million.
By the 1700s a new killer began to dominate – accidental hypothermia.
When indoor temperatures fall below 48°F for prolonged periods, the
human body struggles to keep warm, setting off a series of reactions
that causes stress and can result in heart attacks. As recently as the
1960s in Great Britain, 20,000 elderly and malnourished people who
lacked central heating died from accidental hypothermia. As people with
poor heating faced bouts of extreme cold in the 1700s, accidental
hypothermia was rampant.
What caused the tragic climate changes of the Little Ice Age? Some
scientists suggest lower solar output associated with periods of fewer
sunspots. Increasing solar output then reversed the cooling and warmed
the 20th century world. As solar output is now falling to the
lows of the Little Ice Age, a natural experiment is now in progress
testing that solar theory. However other scientists suggest it was
rising CO2 that delivered the world from the Little Ice Age.
Increasing CO2 also has a beneficial fertilization effect that is greening the earth. The 20th century warming, whether natural or driven by rising CO2
concentrations, has lengthened the growing season. Famines are being
eliminated. Tree-lines stopped retreating and trees are now reclaiming
territory lost over the past 500 years. So why is it that now we face a
climate crisis?
At the end of the 1300’s Great Famine and the Bubonic Plague
epidemic, the earth sustained 350 million people. With today’s advances
in technology and milder growing conditions, record high crop yields are
now feeding a human population that ballooned to over 7.6 billion.
So, the notion that cooler times represent the “good old days” and we are now in a warmer climate crisis seems truly absurd.
Jim Steele is retired director of the Sierra Nevada Field Campus, SFSU