Ancient Texts Fill Blanks in Climate History

Accounts by monks, soldiers, doctors help track global warming
By Janice Eisen,  Newser User
Posted Sep 16, 2007 11:50 AM CDT
Ancient Texts Fill Blanks in Climate History
One of 13 diaries by Brother Josef, inscribed from 1671 to 1704 is shown Aug. 15, 2007 in the Monastery in Einsiedeln, Switzerland. Frozen communion wine, soft rains that caressed the earth and winds that wrought an all-consuming yellow fog are described meticulously by the 17th century Swiss monk in...   (Associated Press)

Scientists are poring over the diaries of 17th century Swiss monks and Parisian physicians for data to help judge changes in Europe’s climate, the AP reports. Piecing together records from things as disparate as military campaigns and cherry blossom festivals dispels any doubt that the Earth is heating up, according to climate historian Christian Pfister. Last winter was Europe’s warmest in 500 years, Pfister says.

Anecdotal evidence from surviving documents—the monks record a January so cold the communion wine froze in its chalice; a late harvest because "there was hardly ever a really warm day"—fills in the blanks before thermometers were standardized in the 19th century. And concerns about global warming have transformed what Pfister says was once a "wallflower science" into a dynamic discipline. (More climate change stories.)

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