Kiwi scientists have helped build the most complete database yet on how the planet's climate has changed from 1AD to the present.
The second version of the PAGES2k dataset, just featured in the journal Scientific Data, pools data from a vast array of sources - including records from tree rings, corals, glacier ice, and for the first time, marine and lake sediments - to create a crucial tool to model or reconstruct climates.
An initial summary of global temperature history, developed using the database, confirms a long-term cooling trend until the 19th century, which is then followed by a sharp warming trend - something consistent with the large body of current climate research.
"The fundamental purpose of this compilation is to provide regionally resolved temperature reconstructions that can be used to accurately assess and thus improve Earth system models providing future projections," said co-author Dr Nancy Bertler, of Victoria University.
This would be important for models to be used in the next major report by the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.