This article is within the scope of WikiProject Weather, which collaborates on weather and related subjects on Wikipedia. To participate, help improve this article or visit the
project page for details.
This article is part of the History of Science WikiProject, an attempt to improve and organize the
history of science content on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, you can edit the article attached to this page, or visit the
project page, where you can join the project and/or contribute to the
discussion. You can also help with the History of Science Collaboration of the Month.History of ScienceWikipedia:WikiProject History of ScienceTemplate:WikiProject History of Sciencehistory of science articles
This page is completely unreferenced; and just about every statement in the intro is questionnable:
Historical climatology is the study of historical changes in weather and their effect on human history. This supplants the traditional study of only ice ages and other dramatic effects. This differs from paleoclimatology because historical climatology studies the correlations of human history and climate change and not merely ecological effects. The study seeks to define periods in human history which were either warmer or cooler than the present.
Um. Yes its a start. But at the moment its a poor article. Your words make it sound like its in danger of being a POV fork - please don't head it that way. Also, wiki isn't a link collection - we have articles on HSC and MWP - ext links (especially to badly biased sites) are not good
William M. Connolley09:42, 17 April 2007 (UTC)reply
Of coures. The article needs expansion, as already requested above. Any contributions gratefully received, especially historic records such as quotes from old texts, maps and manuscripts.
Peterlewis (
talk)
10:38, 12 December 2009 (UTC)reply
Added ref improve template, notified the creator of the article. The correct article for various topics can be found already and the proper term is paleoclimatology. So if the ref situation is not improving, i guess we can delete this article.
prokaryotes (
talk)
10:17, 11 May 2015 (UTC)reply
The single reference appears problematic as it is about ecosystem change not climate change (I can only see the abstract) in pre-historic Australia. This is followed by a bit of
WP:Synthesis.
Vsmith (
talk)
13:31, 11 May 2015 (UTC)reply