Measurement of CO2 Concentrations Through Time
When recording historic levels of CO2 concentration, records from air bubbles in Antarctic ice cores are regarded as the gold standard for paleo-atmospheric global CO2 concentrations during past interglacial and glacial periods over the last 800,000 years. Antarctic ice-core data are openly available from the National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) and have been studied extensively. The trapped gas in ice is the most direct measurement of CO2 concentrations for past atmospheric records, providing a continuous global CO2 baseline.
Another method of recording CO2 concentrations is from plant stomata. This method, however, provides indirect proxy measurements consisting of discontinuous records over the Holocene and deglaciation period. The highly variable CO2 concentrations have high uncertainties in measurements as well as calibration models. Plant stomata studies are mostly from the Northern Hemisphere where local conditions can strongly influence the resulting CO2 proxy estimates. The uncertainties and shortcomings associated with plant stomata CO2 reconstructions outweigh using this dataset as a valid quantitative indicator for paleo-atmospheric global CO2 concentrations.
Read the full report by Renee Hannon here: