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    Home » UK Scientists Detect Human ‘Fingerprints’ from Sky to Seafloor
    Nature

    UK Scientists Detect Human ‘Fingerprints’ from Sky to Seafloor

    Errica JensenBy Errica JensenMarch 26, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    A straightforward horizontal image of colored stripes, blue on the left fading through pale tones before shifting into deep red on the right, has become something of a quiet landmark in climate communication. Each stripe represents a year’s average global surface temperature from 1850 to the present. No labels, no numbers, and no complicated methodology. Just color and the clear narrative it conveys about the trajectory of events. The warming stripes were developed by Ed Hawkins, a climate science professor at the University of Reading. They have been seen on the sides of trams in European cities, on conference center walls, and on ties worn into Parliament. They unexpectedly became a design element, which proved to be one of the best things that could have happened to a dataset that had struggled for decades to be readable by a broad audience.


    Hawkins and Ric Williams, an ocean sciences professor at the University of Liverpool, published something earlier this year that expands that visual logic in a way that most people haven’t considered. They created more than just surface warming stripes. At various depths, they produced them for the ocean. And for the atmosphere: the stratosphere, which contains the ozone layer, and the troposphere, which is where commercial aircraft operate. The outcome is a vertical depiction of the effects of human greenhouse gas emissions on the climate system, from the deep ocean floor to the top of the atmosphere. Additionally, there is a detail in the portrait that, when you understand what it means, is among the strongest pieces of scientific proof that climate change is caused by humans.


    Eleven consecutive warmest years, from 2015 to 2025, are displayed at the far right of the dataset in the surface warming stripes, which are constructed from approximately one billion individual thermometer readings gathered since 1850. The warming stripes for the troposphere appear nearly identical when measured by satellite radiometers that pick up infrared radiation from air molecules rather than thermometers. The warmest years are grouped near the end. a definite redward trend. This verifies the same pattern that surface instruments have been observing using a completely different measurement technique in a completely different region of the atmosphere. The same story, but with different instruments and altitudes.

    Key Facts: Climate Fingerprint Research

    TopicDetection of human climate fingerprints across the full atmospheric and oceanic column
    Lead ResearchersProf. Ed Hawkins (University of Reading) + Prof. Ric Williams (University of Liverpool)
    PublishedFebruary 2026, via The Conversation / University of Reading Research Blog
    Key Tool“Warming Stripes” visualization — extended vertically through atmosphere and down into ocean
    Data FoundationOne billion individual thermometer measurements, 1850–2025
    Satellite RecordAtmospheric temperature monitoring by satellite since 1979
    Key FindingTroposphere warming + stratosphere cooling = unmistakable human greenhouse gas fingerprint
    Ocean Heat Share~90% of the planet’s extra stored heat is in the ocean
    Fingerprint First Predicted1960s — stratospheric cooling from CO₂ increase predicted decades before it was observed
    Sea Level DriverOcean thermal expansion + land ice melt entering the sea
    Reference LinksClimate Fingerprints Top to Bottom – University of Reading · University of Liverpool Research Article
    UK Scientists Detect Human ‘Fingerprints’ from Sky to Seafloor
    UK Scientists Detect Human ‘Fingerprints’ from Sky to Seafloor

    However, the stratosphere, which is the layer of atmosphere above normal airline cruising altitude, tells a very different story, and this is where the human fingerprint is most noticeable. The stratosphere’s warming stripes run in the opposite direction. Around 1980 was one of the warmest years. The most recent years are the coolest. While the rest of the climate system has been warming, the stratosphere has been gradually cooling. This fact may seem contradictory to someone who is unfamiliar with it. Why is the upper atmosphere becoming colder if the planet is gaining heat?
    Understanding the true effects of greenhouse gases at various altitudes is necessary to provide an answer. Increased carbon dioxide concentrations in the lower atmosphere warm the air below by absorbing and retaining heat radiated from the surface like a blanket. However, the physics are different in the stratosphere, where there is very little heat coming from below and the air is thin. The stratosphere is more effective at radiating heat outward to space than it is at receiving heat from below because it contains more CO2. Cooling is the overall outcome. Another contributing factor to the lower stratosphere’s cooling is the industrial chemicals known as chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), which are phased out under the Montreal Protocol and destroy stratospheric ozone.
    This pattern’s scientific significance stems from the fact that it was anticipated prior to its observation. The warming troposphere and cooling stratosphere were identified by climate scientists in the 1960s as the expected fingerprint of greenhouse-gas-driven climate change. This pattern was not caused by solar-driven warming or natural variability, but rather by human emissions changing how the atmosphere handles heat at different altitudes. The atmosphere would warm collectively if the sun were the main source of warming. The troposphere’s warming while the stratosphere’s cooling is a fingerprint that exclusively points to human activity.
    The picture is completed by the ocean layers. Warming stripes drawn at various ocean depths reveal the same general pattern as the surface—the warmest years in the last ten years—but they also include a timing detail that scientists find instructive. Heat moving downward from the surface into the ocean over time is consistent with the warming signal appearing slightly earlier at the surface and gradually later at deeper depths. This makes physical sense and is directly consistent with a warming that is driven by the surface rather than the Earth’s interior. Approximately 90% of the excess heat that the planet retains annually is currently absorbed by the ocean, a buffering effect that has considerably slowed the rise in surface air temperatures that humans directly experience. The warming at the surface would be significantly worse if the ocean weren’t absorbing that heat. On the other hand, because ocean heat does not evaporate or vanish on human timescales, it will continue to affect sea levels and weather patterns long after emissions are decreased.
    Reading this research gives me the impression that science has reached a certain level of completeness, not the false completeness of a closed case, but the completeness of a pattern that has been tracked across all domains where it can be measured and that consistently points in the same direction. Before any significant warming had been seen, the physics of why rising atmospheric CO2 should warm the planet was established in the 1850s. Before there was a satellite record to test it, the stratospheric cooling fingerprint was predicted in the 1960s. Every component of the system, from the stratosphere to the seafloor, is acting precisely as predicted by theory after one billion thermometer readings and decades of satellite data. The rate at which the effects will intensify and the extent to which the ocean’s buffering ability will mitigate the remaining warming are still unknown. However, the answer to the question of what is causing the change and whether the evidence is visible throughout the entire depth and height of the climate system is no longer up for debate. You can find fingerprints everywhere.


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    Human ‘Fingerprints’
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    Errica Jensen
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    Errica Jensen is the Senior Editor at Creative Learning Guild, where she leads editorial coverage of legal news, landmark lawsuits, class action settlements, and consumer rights developments and News across the United Kingdom, United States and beyond. With a career spanning over a decade at the intersection of legal journalism, lawsuits, settlements and educational publishing, Errica brings both rigorous research discipline, in-depth knowledge, experience and an accessible editorial voice to subjects that most readers find interesting and helpful.

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