• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

RealClimate

Climate science from climate scientists...

  • Start here
  • Model-Observation Comparisons
  • Miscellaneous Climate Graphics
  • Surface temperature graphics
You are here: Home / Climate Science / Weren’t temperatures warmer than today during the “Medieval Warm Period”?

Weren’t temperatures warmer than today during the “Medieval Warm Period”?

8 Dec 2004 by mike

Translations: (Français)
Français

This is one of a number of popular myths regarding temperature variations in past centuries. At hemispheric or global scales, surface temperatures are believed to have followed the “Hockey Stick” pattern, characterized by a long-term cooling trend from the so-called “Medieval Warm Period” (broadly speaking, the 10th-mid 14th centuries) through the “Little Ice Age” (broadly speaking, the mid 15th-19th centuries), followed by a rapid warming during the 20th century that culminates in anomalous late 20th century warmth. The late 20th century warmth, at hemispheric or global scales, appears, from a number of recent peer-reviewed studies, to exceed the peak warmth of the “Medieval Warm Period”. Claims that global average temperatures during Medieval times were warmer than present-day are based on a number of false premises that a) confuse past evidence of drought/precipitation with temperature evidence, b) fail to disinguish regional from global-scale temperature variations, and c) use the entire “20th century” to describe “modern” conditions , fail to differentiate between relatively cool early 20th century conditions and the anomalously warm late 20th century conditions.

Filed Under: Climate Science, FAQ, Paleoclimate

Reader Interactions

Trackbacks

  1. super-structure » 25 Reasons Why You Should Understand Neil Boortz Is Wrong | Jason Coleman says:
    19 Sep 2007 at 10:38 AM

    […] Medieval Warm Period. Yet another popular myth. The short answer: it’s global warming, not just European warming. […]

  2. Jeff McIntire-Strasburg » Blog Archive » Green Myth-Busting: Greenland was Once Green says:
    15 Oct 2007 at 2:28 PM

    […] from NOAA. RealClimate, the blog for anyone interested in hardcore climate science, also presents a number of reasons why the perception skeptics have about the Medieval Warm Period are likely […]

  3. Understanding Global Warming « Understanding Global Warming says:
    30 Dec 2007 at 3:47 AM

    […] and had relatively little impact on the global averages. Dr. Michael Mann addresses this here (and for an example of a contrarian tactic that can make it appear otherwise, or that the current […]

  4. Understanding Global Warming says:
    6 Jan 2008 at 9:08 PM

    […] and had relatively little impact on the global averages. Dr. Michael Mann addresses this here (and for an example of a contrarian tactic that can make it appear otherwise, or that the current […]

  5. Hypography Science Forums - Co2 Acquittal says:
    1 Feb 2008 at 1:35 AM

    […] by mitigating our impact. And I know you like this place so yes, I did look here ==> RealClimate Here is an interesting article. […]

  6. Earth: The Climate Wars - Wildlife and Environment Forums says:
    20 Sep 2008 at 12:52 AM

    […] of the little ice age and medieval warm period and many other discussions of climate change: RealClimate To summarise the ideas very simplistically I think this is what they say – the little ice age and […]

  7. Understanding the Basics of Global Holocene Climate Change « Understanding Global Warming says:
    16 Mar 2009 at 8:57 PM

    […] magnitude of medieval warmth was weaker than that of today. Dr. Michael Mann also addresses this here (and for an example of a contrarian tactic that makes it appear otherwise, or that the current […]

  8. Understanding Global Warming says:
    17 Mar 2009 at 1:46 PM

    […] magnitude of medieval warmth was weaker than that of today. Dr. Michael Mann also addresses this here (and for an example of a contrarian tactic that makes it appear otherwise, or that the current […]

  9. Ben’s Blog » Blog Archive » Head to head with a Cardinal says:
    24 May 2009 at 10:58 PM

    […] qualified in a way that I, and the good Cardinal, are not. (The medieval warm period wasn’t warmer. Warming didn’t stop in 1998.) But most appalling to me was this childish attempt to use his […]

Primary Sidebar

Search

Search for:

Email Notification

get new posts sent to you automatically (free)
Loading

Recent Posts

  • Unforced variations: May 2025
  • Unforced Variations: Apr 2025
  • WMO: Update on 2023/4 Anomalies
  • Andean glaciers have shrunk more than ever before in the entire Holocene
  • Climate change in Africa
  • We need NOAA now more than ever

Our Books

Book covers
This list of books since 2005 (in reverse chronological order) that we have been involved in, accompanied by the publisher’s official description, and some comments of independent reviewers of the work.
All Books >>

Recent Comments

  • Tomáš Kalisz on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • Secular Animist on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • Secular Animist on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • Barry E Finch on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • Radge Havers on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • Barton Paul Levenson on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • jgnfld on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • jgnfld on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • zebra on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • Thessalonia on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • Mr. Know It All on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • Mr. Know It All on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • Mr. Know It All on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • Pedro Prieto on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • Pedro Prieto on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • Nigelj on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • Piotr on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • Piotr on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • Killian on Unforced variations: May 2025
  • Killian on Unforced variations: May 2025

Footer

ABOUT

  • About
  • Translations
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Page
  • Login

DATA AND GRAPHICS

  • Data Sources
  • Model-Observation Comparisons
  • Surface temperature graphics
  • Miscellaneous Climate Graphics

INDEX

  • Acronym index
  • Index
  • Archives
  • Contributors

Realclimate Stats

1,364 posts

11 pages

242,910 comments

Copyright © 2025 · RealClimate is a commentary site on climate science by working climate scientists for the interested public and journalists.