Lafiel said:
In our ice core data CO2 concentration always follows the temperature increase, but as this graph shows this only goes back a few hundred thousend years and data prior to that is far more vague. There are several instances in earth history in which it's presumed that dramatically rising or sinking CO2 levels had a big influence on earths climate, but in our current ice-house climate and within that 200ppm-300ppm window of the last few 100k years CO2 has acted as more of an amplifier for other factors (gulf stream activity, solar activity/distance) to create several stable inter-glacial periods. |
I know of a video that addresses this issue: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQ3PzYU1N7A
By the way, I highly HIGHLY recommend potholer54's youtube channel. Highly educational and entertaining channel.








