A world-renowned climatologist who has made "global warming" a colloquial term that died at the age of 87



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A scientist who made "global warming" a household term while he was fighting to popularize the idea that greenhouse gases could cause dramatic climate change has died to the age of 87 years old.

Wallace Smith Broecker, professor and researcher at Columbia University, was described by his colleagues as "unique, brilliant and combative," while tributes were paid to the climate expert.

The professor, known worldwide as the "grandfather of climate science," died Monday night in a hospital in New York City, confirmed a spokesman for his employer.

Professor Broecker generalized the use of "global warming" in a 1975 article that correctly predicted that rising levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere would cause a pronounced rise in temperature.

Demonstration against climate change in Parliament Square – in pictures

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A protest against climate change on Parliament Square in Westminster, London

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Students from the Youth Strike 4 Climate movement at a climate change protest on Parliament Square in Westminster

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Students from the Youth Strike 4 Climate movement at a climate change protest on Parliament Square in Westminster

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Young protesters hold placards standing on a statue of Prime Minister Winston Churchill in wartime.

AFP / Getty Images

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Schoolchildren participate in a student climate march on Parliament Square

Getty Images

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Police officers speak to a protester as students from the Youth Strike 4 Climate movement take part in a protest against climate change on Parliament Square in Westminster.

Pennsylvania

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Students from the Youth Strike 4 Climate movement at a climate change protest on Parliament Square

Pennsylvania

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A protest against climate change in Westminster, London

Alex Lentati

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Students of the Youth Strike 4 Climate Movement at a climate change protest on Parliament Square in Westminster,

Pennsylvania

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Students from the Youth Strike 4 Climate movement in front of the gates of Downing Street at a protest against climate change

Pennsylvania

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Three-year-old Violet Wicks, of London, at a protest against climate change on Parliament Square in Westminster, London.

Pennsylvania

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People are participating in a "Youth Strike for Climate Change" protest in London.

Reuters

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Students from Graveney School, Tooting join the Youth Strike 4 Climate Movement at a protest against climate change on Parliament Square in Westminster, London.

Pennsylvania

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Schoolchildren participate in a student climate walk

Getty Images

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Banners at a protest against climate change on Parliament Square in Westminster,

Pennsylvania

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Schoolchildren participate in a student climate walk

Getty Images

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Young girl watching people take part in "Youth Strike for Climate Change" protest in London

Reuters

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People participate in a "youth strike for climate change" protest in London

Reuters

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Schoolchildren participate in a student climate march on Parliament Square

Getty Images

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Students from the Youth Strike 4 Climate movement at a climate change protest on Parliament Square in Westminster

Pennsylvania

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Students from the Youth Strike 4 Climate movement at a climate change protest on Parliament Square in Westminster

Pennsylvania

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Protesters at a Youth Strike 4 Climate protest in front of Shire Hall in Cambridge

Pennsylvania

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Students of the Youth Strike 4 Climate Movement at a protest against climate change in the Canterbury shopping street in Kent

Pennsylvania

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Schoolchildren participate in a student climate walk in Briighton

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A protest against climate change on Parliament Square in Westminster, London

Pennsylvania


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Students from the Youth Strike 4 Climate movement at a climate change protest on Parliament Square in Westminster

Pennsylvania


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Students from the Youth Strike 4 Climate movement at a climate change protest on Parliament Square in Westminster

Pennsylvania


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Young protesters hold placards standing on a statue of Prime Minister Winston Churchill in wartime.

AFP / Getty Images



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Schoolchildren participate in a student climate march on Parliament Square

Getty Images


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Police officers speak to a protester as students from the Youth Strike 4 Climate movement take part in a protest against climate change on Parliament Square in Westminster.

Pennsylvania


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Students from the Youth Strike 4 Climate movement at a climate change protest on Parliament Square

Pennsylvania


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A protest against climate change in Westminster, London

Alex Lentati



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Students of the Youth Strike 4 Climate Movement at a climate change protest on Parliament Square in Westminster,

Pennsylvania


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Students from the Youth Strike 4 Climate movement in front of the gates of Downing Street at a protest against climate change

Pennsylvania


11/32

Three-year-old Violet Wicks, of London, at a protest against climate change on Parliament Square in Westminster, London.

Pennsylvania


12/32

People are participating in a "Youth Strike for Climate Change" protest in London.

Reuters



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Students from Graveney School, Tooting join the Youth Strike 4 Climate Movement at a protest against climate change on Parliament Square in Westminster, London.

Pennsylvania


14/32

Schoolchildren participate in a student climate walk

Getty Images


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Banners at a protest against climate change on Parliament Square in Westminster,

Pennsylvania


16/32

Schoolchildren participate in a student climate walk

Getty Images



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Young girl watching people take part in "Youth Strike for Climate Change" protest in London

Reuters


18/32

People participate in a "youth strike for climate change" protest in London

Reuters


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Schoolchildren participate in a student climate march on Parliament Square

Getty Images


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Students from the Youth Strike 4 Climate movement at a climate change protest on Parliament Square in Westminster

Pennsylvania



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Students from the Youth Strike 4 Climate movement at a climate change protest on Parliament Square in Westminster

Pennsylvania


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Protesters at a Youth Strike 4 Climate protest in front of Shire Hall in Cambridge

Pennsylvania


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Students of the Youth Strike 4 Climate Movement at a protest against climate change in the Canterbury shopping street in Kent

Pennsylvania


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Schoolchildren participate in a student climate walk in Briighton

Getty Images



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AFP / Getty Images


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He then became the first person to recognize what he called the oceanic treadmill, a global network of currents that affected everything from air temperature to rain diets.

"Wally was unique, brilliant and combative," said Michael Oppenheimer, a professor at Princeton University. "He did not let himself be fooled by the cooling of the 1970s. He clearly saw unprecedented warming and clearly expressed his point of view, even though few people were willing to listen to him."

In the oceanic conveyor belt, the cold, salty water of the North Atlantic flows in the manner of a diver who leads the ocean current from North America to Europe. The warm surface waters supported by this current help maintain the mild climate of Europe.

According to Professor Broecker, Europe would be frozen, with average winter temperatures dropping more than 11 ° C and more, and London looking more like Spitsbergen, Norway, 600 miles north of the Arctic Circle.


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Professor Broecker said his studies suggested that the conveyor was the "Achilles heel of the climate system" and a fragile phenomenon that can change quickly for reasons not understood.

It would only need a slight increase in temperature to prevent water from sinking in the North Atlantic, which would have the effect of putting the conveyor to a halt.

He said it was possible that the warming caused by the accumulation of greenhouse gases is enough to affect the ocean currents dramatically.

"Broecker alone has popularized the idea that this could lead to a dramatic" turning point "for climate change and, more generally, Broecker has helped to communicate to the public and policymakers the potential for abrupt climate change and" surprises "Unwelcome because of the changing climate," said Michael Mann, a professor at Penn State.

UN report on global warming

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Rhone Glacier and glacier lake

AFP / Getty Images

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Smoke emanating from the Weisweiler coal-fired power plant from an open pit Weisweiler mine

AFP / Getty Images

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A train (top left) crossing dry paddocks in Quirindi region, affected by drought, in New South Wales

AFP / Getty Images

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Young Indians cross garbage dumps in Mumbai on the eve of World Environment Day

AFP / Getty Images

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Men carry bags of cbaditerite (tin ore), coltan, used in cell phones and computers, and manganese from the Mudere mine

AFP / Getty Images

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Indian cloth pickers at work in a landfill filled with plastic bags

AFP / Getty Images

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Pollution layers in Santiago

AFP / Getty Images

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An access road being built in a peatland forest being cleared for a palm oil plantation

AFP / Getty Images

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Microplastics and mesoplastic debris on the beach of Almaciga, on the northern coast of the Canary Island of Tenerife

AFP / Getty Images

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A Bangladeshi crosses the remains of a house near the eroding banks of the Padma River

AFP / Getty Images

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A bucket wheel excavator standing at the Hambach lignite open pit mine near the Hambacher Forst forest in Elsdorf

AFP / Getty Images

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Ruins of a hotel destroyed by the rise in sea level

AFP / Getty Images

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Indian coalman carries basket of recovered coal at mine in Dhanbad district i

AFP / Getty Images

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Smoke smoke in a coal power plant near Datong, Shanxi Province, North China

AFP / Getty Images

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Pakistani Seeks Recyclable Materials at Lahore Landfill

AFP / Getty Images

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A member of the NNS Pathfinder of the Nigerian Naval Forces is crossing the oil-covered environment of an illegal refinery destroyed in the Niger Delta region near the town of Port Harcourt.

AFP / Getty Images

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Miner walking in an open pit mine located in the interior of Sungai Liat lands

AFP / Getty Images

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outdoor discharge in France

AFP / Getty Images

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Smoke rising from cooling towers at EDF's Cottam coal-fired power plant beyond a rape field near Darlton

AFP / Getty Images



1/19

Rhone Glacier and glacier lake

AFP / Getty Images


2/19

Smoke emanating from the Weisweiler coal-fired power plant from an open pit Weisweiler mine

AFP / Getty Images


3/19

A train (top left) crossing dry paddocks in Quirindi region, affected by drought, in New South Wales

AFP / Getty Images


4/19

Young Indians cross garbage dumps in Mumbai on the eve of World Environment Day

AFP / Getty Images



5/19

Men carry bags of cbaditerite (tin ore), coltan, used in cell phones and computers, and manganese from the Mudere mine

AFP / Getty Images


6/19

Indian cloth pickers at work in a landfill filled with plastic bags

AFP / Getty Images


7/19

Pollution layers in Santiago

AFP / Getty Images


8/19

An access road being built in a peatland forest being cleared for a palm oil plantation

AFP / Getty Images



9/19

Microplastics and mesoplastic debris on the beach of Almaciga, on the northern coast of the Canary Island of Tenerife

AFP / Getty Images


10/19

A Bangladeshi crosses the remains of a house near the eroding banks of the Padma River

AFP / Getty Images


11/19

A bucket wheel excavator standing at the Hambach lignite open pit mine near the Hambacher Forst forest in Elsdorf

AFP / Getty Images


12/19

Ruins of a hotel destroyed by the rise in sea level

AFP / Getty Images



13/19

Indian coalman carries basket of recovered coal at mine in Dhanbad district i

AFP / Getty Images


14/19

Smoke smoke in a coal power plant near Datong, Shanxi Province, North China

AFP / Getty Images


15/19

Pakistani Seeks Recyclable Materials at Lahore Landfill

AFP / Getty Images


16/19

A member of the NNS Pathfinder of the Nigerian Naval Forces is crossing the oil-covered environment of an illegal refinery destroyed in the Niger Delta region near the town of Port Harcourt.

AFP / Getty Images



17/19

Miner walking in an open pit mine located in the interior of Sungai Liat lands

AFP / Getty Images


18/19

outdoor discharge in France

AFP / Getty Images


19/19

Smoke rising from cooling towers at EDF's Cottam coal-fired power plant beyond a rape field near Darlton

AFP / Getty Images

"We live in a climate system that can suddenly switch from one state to another," Professor Broecker told The Associated Press in 1997.

By releasing huge amounts of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, such as carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels, "we have an experiment that could have devastating effects."

"We are playing with an angry beast – a climate system that has turned out to be very sensitive," he said.

Professor Broecker received the National Science Medal in 1996 and was a member of the National Academy of Science.


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He also held the position of research coordinator for Biosphere 2, an experimental laboratory for the living environment.

Prof Broecker was born in Chicago in 1931 and grew up in the suburbs of Oak Park.

He joined Columbia faculty in 1959, spending most of his time at the university lab in Palisades, NY.

He was known in scientific circles as the "grandfather of climate science" and the "dean of climate scientists".

"His discoveries have been fundamental in interpreting the history of Earth's climate," said Professor Oppenheimer.

"No scientist was more stimulating, he was an effective promoter, willing to defend unpopular ideas, such as particles to offset climate change.But it was always a two-way conversation, never boring, always educational, I'll miss him. "

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