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Ian Plimer
Ian Plimer
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Ian Rutherford Plimer (born 12 February 1946) is an Australian geologist and professor emeritus at the University of Melbourne.[1] He rejects the scientific consensus on climate change. He has been criticised by climate scientists for misinterpreting data and spreading misinformation.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8]

Key Information

Plimer previously worked as a professor of mining geology at the University of Adelaide,[9] and the director of multiple mineral exploration and mining companies,[10] He has also been a critic of creationism.[11]

Early life and education

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Ian Plimer grew up in Sydney and attended Normanhurst Boys High School.[12] He earned a BSc (Hons) in mining engineering at the University of New South Wales in 1968,[12] and a PhD in Geology at Macquarie University[13] in 1976.[14] His doctoral thesis (from 1973) was titled, The pipe deposits of tungsten-molybdenum-bismuth in eastern Australia.[14]

Career

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Academia

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Plimer started as a tutor and senior tutor in earth sciences at Macquarie University from 1968 to 1973.[15][16] After finishing his PhD, he became a lecturer in geology at the W.S. and L.B. Robinson University College of the University of New South Wales at Broken Hill from 1974 to 1979.[15][16] Part of his work focused on the Broken Hill ore deposit—a large zinc-lead-silver mine in Australia.[17][18][non-primary source needed] Plimer then went to work for North Broken Hill Ltd. between 1979 and 1982, becoming chief research geologist.[12][15][16] Due to his publication of a number of academic papers, he was offered a job as senior lecturer in economic geology at the University of New England in 1982.[12][15][16] After two years, he left to become a professor and head of geology at the University of Newcastle through 1991.[10][12] Plimer later served as professor and head of geology of the School of Earth Sciences at the University of Melbourne from 1991 to 2005.[10][12] He was conferred as professor emeritus of earth sciences at the University of Melbourne in 2005,[9] and was a professor of mining geology at the University of Adelaide.[1][10][19]

Plimer is a fellow of the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering, the Australian Institute of Geoscientists and the Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy;[13] an honorary fellow of the Geological Society of London;[13][20] a member of the Geological Society of Australia, the Royal Society of South Australia, and the Royal Society of New South Wales.[13]

He co-edited the 2005 edition of Encyclopedia of Geology.[21][non-primary source needed]

Mining companies

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Plimer is the former non-executive director of CBH Resources Limited from 1998 to 2010, former non-executive director of Angel Mining plc from 2003 to 2005, former director of Kimberley Metals Limited from 2008 to 2009, former director of KBL Mining Limited from 2008 to 2009 and former director of Ormil Energy Limited from 2010 to 2011.[22][10][23]

He is currently the non-executive deputy chairman of KEFI Minerals since 2006,[24] independent non-executive director of Ivanhoe Australia Limited since 2007,[25] chairman of TNT Mines Limited since 2010,[19][26] non-executive director of Niuminco Group Limited (formerly DSF International Holdings Limited) since 2011,[27][28] and non-executive director of Silver City Minerals Limited since 2011.[10][23][29][30][31] Plimer was appointed director of Roy Hill Holdings and Queensland Coal Investments in 2012.[32]

According to a columnist in The Age, Plimer earned over $400,000 (AUD) from several of these companies, and he has mining shares and options worth hundreds of thousands of Australian dollars.[33] Plimer has stated that his business interests do not affect the independence of his beliefs.[29] He has also warned that the proposed Australian carbon-trading scheme could decimate the Australian mining industry.[12][34]

Views on climate change

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He is a member of the academic advisory council for climate change denialist pressure group The Global Warming Policy Foundation,[35] a member of Australians for Northern Development & Economic Vision (ANDEV),[36] and was an allied expert for the Natural Resources Stewardship Project.[37] Plimer is also a member of the Saltbush Club, a group that promotes climate change denial.[38]

Plimer rejects the scientific consensus on climate change. He accuses the environmental movement of being irrational, and claims that the vast bulk of the scientific community, including most major scientific academies, is prejudiced by the prospect of research funding. He characterised the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change as: "The IPCC process is related to environmental activism, politics and opportunism" and "the IPCC process is unrelated to science".[39] He is critical of greenhouse gas politics and says that extreme environmental changes are inevitable.[citation needed] Climatologists call his reasoning on climate change flawed, inaccurate and misleading and say he misrepresents their data.[40][2][3]

Volcanoes and CO2

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Plimer has said that volcanic eruptions release more carbon dioxide (CO2) than human activity; in particular that submarine volcanoes emit large amounts of CO2 and that the influence of the gases from these volcanoes on the Earth's climate is under-represented in climate models.[41][42][43] The United States Geological Survey has calculated that human emissions of CO2 are about 130 times larger than volcanic emissions, including submarine emissions.[44][45][46] The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) stated that Plimer's claim "has no factual basis."[47] This was confirmed in a 2011 survey published in the Eos journal of the American Geophysical Union, which found that anthropogenic emissions of CO2 are 135 times larger than those from all volcanoes on Earth.[48]

Heaven and Earth

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In 2009, Plimer released Heaven and Earth, a book in which he says that climate models focus too strongly on the effects of carbon dioxide, and do not give the weight he thinks is appropriate to other factors such as solar variation.[49] The aim of the book is to belittle the impact of humans on Earth by clouting all the other science like a blunt instrument, as in Plimer's words "I wanted to kill an ant with a sledgehammer."[50] Critics of the book have accused Plimer of misrepresenting sources,[51][irrelevant citation] misusing data,[52][53] and engaging in conspiracy theories.[54][55] Some critics have also described the book as unscientific,[56] and said that it contains numerous errors from which Plimer draws false conclusions.[57][58][59][60][61][62]

Copenhagen Climate Challenge

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During the United Nations Climate Change Conference 2009 (COP15), Plimer spoke at a rival conference in Copenhagen for climate change deniers, called the Copenhagen Climate Challenge,[63] which was organised by the Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow.[64][65][63] According to The Australian newspaper, Plimer was a star attraction of the two-day event.[66] In closing his speech, Plimer stated that "They’ve got us outnumbered, but we’ve got them outgunned, and that’s with the truth."[63]

El Niño, earthquakes and sea levels

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Plimer has stated that El Niño is caused by earthquakes and volcanic activity at the mid-ocean ridges and that the melting of polar ice has nothing to do with man-made carbon dioxide.[67] Plimer told Radio Australia that Pacific island nations are seeing changes in relative sea level not because of global warming but quite commonly due to other factors, such as "vibration consolidating the coral island sands", extraction of water, and extraction of sand for road and air strip making.[68]

Political influence

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In 2009, Plimer was cited by the leader of the Liberal Party of Australia, Tony Abbott,[69] in dismissing the IPCC and its findings. But by 2011, Abbott had modified his position and stated that climate change is real and humanity makes a contribution to it.[70]

In early 2010, Plimer toured Australia with British climate change denier Christopher Monckton, giving lectures on climate change,[71] and Plimer's views came to be associated with Monckton's claim that the international left created the threat of catastrophic global warming. On this association, left-wing columnist Phillip Adams commented: "Praise the lord for Lord Monckton! For Ian Plimer! For [conservative columnist] Andrew Bolt! Not only does this evil axis of scientists tell lies [about the Greenhouse Effect] but they've also doctored the weather to frighten people with huge droughts, cyclones and tsunamis to prove what they now call 'global warming'."[72] Plimer's book Not for Greens[73] expanded his view.[74] Climate scientist Ian McHugh has refuted a number of the scientific claims in the book.[75]

Opposition to creationism

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Plimer is an outspoken critic of creationism and is famous for a 1988 debate with creationist Duane Gish in which he asked his opponent to hold live electrical cables to prove that electromagnetism was 'only a theory'. Gish accused him of being theatrical, abusive and slanderous.[76]

In 1990 Plimer's anti-creationist behaviour was criticised in Creation/Evolution journal,[77] in an article titled "How Not to Argue with Creationists"[78] by skeptic and anti-creationist Jim Lippard for (among other things) including false claims and errors, and "behaving poorly" in the 1988 Gish debate.

Book: Telling Lies for God

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In his book Telling Lies for God: Reason vs Creationism (1994), Plimer attacked creationists in Australia, in specific the Queensland-based Creation Science Foundation (now called Creation Ministries International or CMI), saying that claims of a biblical global flood are untenable.[79] In the book he also criticised aspects of traditional Christian belief and literal interpretations of the Bible, with chapters titled "Scientific Fraud: The Great Flood of Absurdities" and "Disinformation Doublespeak".[76]

Court case

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In the late 1990s, Plimer went to court alleging misleading and deceptive advertising under the Trade Practices Act 1974 against Noah's Ark searcher Allen Roberts,[79] arising from Plimer's attacks on Roberts' claims concerning the location of Noah's Ark. Before the trial, Plimer was removed by police from public meetings at which Roberts spoke.[76] The court ruled that Roberts' claims did not constitute trade or commerce, and so were not covered by the act. It found that Roberts had indeed made false and misleading claims on two of 16 instances cited by Plimer, Plimer had failed to show the other 14, and the two were minor enough to not require remedy. Plimer lost the case,[80] and was ordered to pay his own and Roberts' legal costs estimated at over 500,000 Australian dollars.[81][82]

Awards

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Bibliography

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Ian Plimer is an Australian geologist and emeritus professor of Earth Sciences at the University of Melbourne, recognized for his expertise in mining geology and ore deposits. Throughout his career, Plimer served as professor and head of the geology department at the University of Newcastle from 1985 and later as professor and head of Earth Sciences at the University of Melbourne from 1990 to 2005, where he advanced research in geological processes and mineral resources. He has authored over 120 peer-reviewed scientific papers on topics including granite geochemistry and rare earth element patterns, and co-edited the five-volume Encyclopedia of Geology, establishing his contributions to foundational earth science knowledge. Among his notable achievements are the Clarke Medal awarded in 2004 by the Royal Society of New South Wales for distinguished research in the earth sciences and the Eureka Prize in 1995 from the Australian Museum for promoting science through geological insights into planetary history. Plimer's public writings, including Heaven and Earth: Global Warming – The Missing Science (2009), apply geological evidence of natural climate variability over billions of years to challenge claims of unprecedented human-driven warming, arguing that empirical data from deep time reveal cycles far exceeding recent observations in magnitude and frequency. These perspectives, rooted in causal mechanisms observable in the rock record rather than atmospheric proxies alone, have fueled ongoing debates, with Plimer maintaining that policy responses often overlook the planet's inherent dynamism documented in stratigraphic and isotopic records.

Early Life and Education

Upbringing and Family Influences

Ian Plimer was born on 12 February 1946 and grew up in Sydney, Australia, in a financially constrained household shaped by his father's disability from multiple sclerosis. His mother supported the family of three children as a schoolteacher, instilling habits of thrift such as reusing brown paper bags for school lunches and turning off lights to save on electricity bills—practices driven by economic necessity rather than ideological environmentalism. Plimer has recounted a frugal, semi-rural childhood without modern amenities like television (which arrived in Australia in 1956) or air conditioning, relying instead on family-produced food, wood stoves, coal gas for cooking and heating, and outhouses. These experiences, including manual labor and direct exposure to natural resource use, fostered an early appreciation for practical energy solutions and skepticism toward unsubstantiated claims of scarcity or crisis, themes that recur in his later critiques of environmental orthodoxy. He later spent significant time in the mining town of Broken Hill, where the realities of resource extraction further reinforced his grounded perspective on human progress and Earth's geological history.

Academic Training and Degrees

Ian Plimer obtained a Bachelor of Science with honours from the University of New South Wales in 1968. He then completed a Doctor of Philosophy in geology at Macquarie University in 1976, with a doctoral thesis examining joint-controlled quartz-rich molybdenite-bismuth±wolframite pipe deposits in eastern Australia.

Academic and Professional Career

University Appointments and Teaching

Plimer was appointed Professor and Head of the Department of Geology at the University of Newcastle in January 1985, serving in that role until 1991. In 1991, he became Professor and Head of Earth Sciences at the University of Melbourne, a position he held until 2005, during which he oversaw departmental teaching and research in geological and earth sciences disciplines. That same year, he also served as German Research Foundation Professor of Ore Deposits at Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich, contributing to specialized geological education and research. In 2006, Plimer joined the University of Adelaide as Professor of Mining Geology, a role he maintained until 2012. He was specifically recruited from Melbourne to develop mining geology curricula, lead the establishment of undergraduate and postgraduate programs in the field, and address industry demands for trained professionals in mineral exploration and extraction. This included spearheading a new four-year mining engineering degree to meet skills shortages in the sector. Plimer holds emeritus status as Professor of Earth Sciences at the University of Melbourne and honorary emeritus professorship in its School of Geography, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences. Throughout his appointments, his teaching emphasized applied geology, ore deposits, and earth history, integrating field-based learning with industry-relevant coursework.

Geological Research and Discoveries

Plimer's geological research primarily focused on the genesis, mineralogy, and geochemistry of ore deposits, with emphasis on stratiform and volcanic-hosted systems in Australian Proterozoic and Phanerozoic terranes. His work advanced models for syngenetic ore formation through submarine exhalative processes, integrating field mapping, petrographic analysis, and geochemical data to link mineralization to contemporaneous tectonic and magmatic events. Over his academic career, he published more than 120 peer-reviewed papers in journals such as the Journal of Geochemical Exploration, addressing topics from uranium-gold associations in volcanic systems to the paragenesis of base metals in metamorphosed terrains. A cornerstone of his contributions was to the Broken Hill Pb-Zn-Ag deposit in New South Wales, one of the world's largest stratiform ore bodies formed around 1.68 billion years ago in a rift-related sedimentary-volcanic environment. Plimer proposed that primary mineralization occurred via hydrothermal exhalations during deposition of pelitic host rocks, contemporaneous with bimodal felsic-mafic volcanism, challenging purely metamorphic remobilization hypotheses. This framework, detailed in his 1986 publications and subsequent collaborations, incorporated sulfur isotope and fluid inclusion evidence to support a submarine volcanic-exhalative (SEDEX) model with supergene enrichment. His expertise on Broken Hill-type deposits, characterized by high-grade Pb-Zn-Ag in high-grade metamorphic settings, extended to comparative studies of similar systems like Elura and regional metallogeny in the Willyama Supergroup. Plimer's analyses highlighted alteration halos and paragenetic sequences, aiding exploration strategies for concealed orebodies. In recognition of these efforts, the International Mineralogical Association approved the naming of plimerite (ZnFe₄(PO₄)₃(OH)₅), a secondary phosphate mineral from Broken Hill, in his honor in 2009, citing his foundational work on the deposit's geology. Beyond ore deposits, Plimer investigated granite-related mineralization and regional geochemistry, including the petrology of the Lake Boga Granite in Victoria, where he documented REE patterns and metasomatic features indicative of A-type affinities. He also contributed to broader syntheses as one of three managing editors of the five-volume Encyclopaedia of Geology (2004), overseeing sections on mineral resources, earth history, and exploration geochemistry.

Roles in Mining and Industry

Plimer commenced his professional involvement in the mining sector as a senior research geologist for North Broken Hill Ltd from 1980 to 1983, focusing on geological exploration and analysis. Following this, he provided consultancy services to prominent mining firms, including Niugini Mining, Getty Oil, and Johannesburg Consolidated Investment (JCI), advising on mineral exploration and resource evaluation. These early roles leveraged his geological expertise to support operational and discovery activities in base metals and other commodities. Over subsequent decades, Plimer assumed multiple board positions in resource companies, emphasizing strategic oversight in exploration, development, and production. He served as a non-executive director of CBH Resources Ltd from 1998 to 2010, a firm operating zinc, lead, and silver mines in Western Australia and New South Wales. Other notable past directorships include those at Ivanhoe Australia (a subsidiary of Ivanhoe Mines focused on copper and gold), KBL Mining Ltd (2008–2009), Austin Metals Ltd (2011–2017), and Lakes Oil NL (2015–2019, involving oil and gas assets). In recent years, Plimer has held leadership roles in energy and metals firms. He joined Senex Energy Ltd as a director in 2022 and was appointed chairman in April 2024, guiding the company's natural gas production and development in Australia's Surat Basin. Current positions encompass non-executive chairman of Niuminco Group Ltd (since November 2015, gold exploration in Papua New Guinea) and Warrego Energy Ltd (since February 2023, gas assets in Australia), as well as non-executive director of Atlas Iron Pty Ltd (since October 2018, iron ore operations). He also serves as director of Queensland Coal Investments Pty Ltd, Hope Downs Iron Ore Pty Ltd, and independent non-executive director of Broken Hill Mines Ltd and Coolabah Metals Ltd. These appointments reflect his ongoing influence in directing investment and risk management within the mining and energy sectors.

Publications and Intellectual Contributions

Works on Geology and Earth History

Plimer's geological research centers on economic geology, particularly the formation of ore deposits through hydrothermal processes and volcanism. He has published more than 120 scientific papers in peer-reviewed journals, with a focus on mineral exploration, geochemistry, and the evolution of major deposits such as those involving gold, lead-zinc-silver, and tungsten-molybdenum-bismuth systems. Key contributions include studies on the Ladolam gold deposit on Lihir Island, New Ireland, where he detailed the geology, mineralization, and hydrothermal evolution within a Quaternary volcanic setting, highlighting fluid interactions and epithermal gold precipitation mechanisms. His work on Australian pipe deposits of tungsten-molybdenum-bismuth emphasized episodic hydrothermal fracturing and ore mineral precipitation via fluid mixing or cooling. In broader earth history contexts, Plimer co-edited the five-volume Encyclopedia of Geology (2005, Elsevier), a reference work encompassing planetary formation, stratigraphic records, tectonic evolution, and paleoenvironmental reconstructions across geological epochs. The encyclopedia integrates empirical data on earth materials, surface processes, and historical events like mass extinctions and supercontinent cycles, drawing from global datasets to model causal sequences in geodynamics. For public dissemination of earth history, Plimer authored A Short History of Planet Earth (2001, ABC Books), a synthesis of geological evidence tracing solar system origins, planetary accretion, and Earth's 4.6-billion-year record of crustal recycling, atmospheric shifts, and biospheric feedbacks. The book, derived from his public lectures, underscores empirical observations of dynamic interactions among solar radiation, orbital mechanics, volcanism, and sedimentation, while noting persistent gaps in reconstructing pre-Cambrian events. It received the Eureka Prize for Science Book in 2002 for accessible explanation of deep-time processes. Specialized monographs include Milos: Geologic History, which examines the Aegean island's volcanic arc setting, caldera formations, and associated epithermal mineral deposits from Miocene to recent activity. Plimer's ore deposit studies, such as those on the Broken Hill Pb-Zn-Ag system, apply metamorphic and metasomatic models to explain high-grade concentrations formed over Proterozoic timescales. These works collectively emphasize first-order geological drivers like plate tectonics and mantle degassing over shorter-term perturbations.

Books Challenging Environmental Orthodoxy

Ian Plimer has authored several books that critique prevailing environmental narratives, particularly those emphasizing catastrophic anthropogenic influences on climate, drawing on geological evidence of natural variability over Earth's history. These works argue that policy responses to alleged climate crises often overlook empirical data from paleoclimatology and prioritize alarmism over verifiable causation. In Heaven and Earth: Global Warming – the Missing Science, published in 2009, Plimer contends that climate changes, including variations in sea levels and ice sheets, have occurred repeatedly throughout geological time without human industrial activity, rendering current warming trends unexceptional. The book references over 2,300 peer-reviewed scientific studies to support claims that natural forcings, such as solar activity and volcanic emissions, dominate over trace atmospheric CO2 increases from human sources. Plimer asserts that the observed modern changes are smaller in magnitude than past episodes, like those during the Holocene or earlier epochs, and questions the reliability of short-term proxy data used by consensus models. How to Get Expelled from School: A Guide to Climate Change for Pupils, Parents and Punters, released in 2011, targets educational curricula by posing 101 targeted questions designed to probe the assumptions underlying school teachings on climate change. Plimer argues that such education often presents politicized interpretations as settled fact, sidelining geological context like recurring ice ages and interglacials driven by orbital cycles and tectonic processes. Launched by former Australian Prime Minister John Howard on December 1, 2011, the book includes bibliographical references to encourage independent verification, positioning itself as a tool for fostering critical inquiry among students and the public. Plimer's 2014 publication, Not for Greens: He Who Sups with the Devil Should Have a Long Spoon, extends the critique to broader environmental policies, labeling many as unrealistic and economically destructive when evaluated against historical resource use and technological progress. It examines how green advocacy ignores Earth's carbon cycle dynamics, where CO2 levels have fluctuated vastly without mass extinctions tied to human emissions, and challenges the sustainability of anti-fossil fuel stances given their role in lifting global living standards. Plimer warns that such policies benefit specific interests rather than environmental outcomes, urging reliance on empirical earth science over ideological prescriptions.

Contributions to Edited Volumes on Climate

Ian Plimer has contributed chapters to multiple volumes in the "Climate Change: The Facts" series, edited collections compiling skeptical perspectives on anthropogenic global warming from scientists, economists, and commentators. In the 2011 edition edited by Alan Moran, Plimer's chapter examines geological evidence spanning millions of years, arguing that natural cycles of carbon dioxide levels and temperature fluctuations—far exceeding current human emissions—demonstrate climate variability driven by solar activity, orbital changes, and volcanic processes rather than anthropogenic CO2. He contends that the geological record shows no unprecedented warming in the modern era and critiques alarmist models for ignoring these long-term patterns. Plimer's contribution to the 2017 volume, edited by Jennifer Marohasy, appears as Chapter 20 and reinforces his geological standpoint, emphasizing that Earth's climate has undergone rapid shifts without human influence, such as during the Medieval Warm Period or post-glacial recoveries, which render claims of human-induced catastrophe empirically unsupported. He highlights inconsistencies in paleoclimate data interpretation by mainstream climatologists, attributing them to selective emphasis on short-term instrumental records over proxy evidence from ice cores and sediments. These chapters align with Plimer's broader oeuvre, prioritizing empirical stratigraphy and historical precedents over predictive simulations, though critics from consensus-aligned institutions have dismissed them as overlooking radiative forcing specifics; Plimer counters that such mechanisms fail to explain pre-industrial variability without invoking unverified feedbacks. No peer-reviewed climate journals have published direct rebuttals to these specific contributions, reflecting the series' positioning outside IPCC-endorsed channels.

Skepticism of Anthropogenic Climate Change Alarmism

Geological Evidence Against Catastrophism

Plimer contends that the geological record demonstrates Earth's climate has undergone profound fluctuations over billions of years, driven by natural processes rather than anthropogenic factors, thereby undermining claims of unprecedented catastrophe from human CO2 emissions. He highlights that atmospheric CO2 concentrations were significantly higher in the distant past—reaching approximately 7,000 parts per million during the Cambrian period around 500 million years ago—without triggering runaway greenhouse effects or ocean acidification on the scale alleged in modern alarmist narratives. Similarly, five of the six major ice ages in Earth's history occurred when CO2 levels were far elevated compared to pre-industrial baselines, indicating no direct causal link between CO2 and global cooling or warming extremes. These cycles, evidenced by stratigraphic layers, fossil distributions, and isotopic records in sedimentary rocks, reflect dominant influences from orbital variations (Milankovitch cycles), solar output changes, and continental drift, which have repeatedly reshaped ocean currents and albedo without human intervention. A key aspect of Plimer's critique involves volcanic activity, which he argues contributes substantially more to atmospheric CO2 than industrial emissions, based on estimates of subaerial and submarine volcanism. He notes that over 85% of global volcanoes are submarine and unmonitored, continuously degassing CO2 at rates that, when aggregated over geological timescales, dwarf the approximately 30 billion metric tons emitted annually by humans. In regions like Antarctica, geothermal hotspots and subglacial volcanoes further illustrate ongoing natural heat and gas fluxes that influence ice dynamics independently of atmospheric CO2. Plimer draws on ore deposit formations and hydrothermal vent records to support this, positing that such processes have sustained Earth's carbon cycle through mass extinctions and supercontinent cycles, as seen in events like the Permian-Triassic boundary 252 million years ago, where recovery followed without residual "tipping points." Plimer further emphasizes the uniformitarian perspective from 19th-century geology, where ice sheet advances and retreats—evidenced by moraines, tillites, and dropstones in Precambrian and Phanerozoic strata—were recognized as recurrent phenomena tied to solar insolation and tectonic reconfiguration, not novel anthropogenic forcings. He argues that current polar ice melt aligns with interglacial patterns within the ongoing 34-million-year Antarctic glaciation, where natural variability has produced sea-level rises of up to 120 meters during prior terminations, such as Marine Isotope Stage 11 around 400,000 years ago, without corresponding CO2 spikes as the primary driver. This evidence, derived from deep-sea cores and paleomagnetic data, suggests that projecting short-term instrumental records onto deep time ignores the causal primacy of geophysical and astronomical mechanisms over trace gas perturbations.

Key Arguments on Natural Climate Variability

Ian Plimer contends that Earth's climate has exhibited profound variability over its 4.5 billion-year history, driven primarily by natural mechanisms rather than human influences, with geological records demonstrating cycles of warming and cooling far exceeding recent observations in magnitude and rapidity. He emphasizes that ice has been absent for most of geological time, with Earth experiencing six major ice ages amid higher atmospheric CO2 levels than today, underscoring that CO2 does not act as a primary climate driver. In his view, focusing on the past century ignores this long-term natural dynamism, where temperature changes often precede CO2 fluctuations by 650 to 1,600 years, as revealed by ice core data. Plimer identifies multiple interlocking natural drivers of this variability, including orbital cycles (Milankovitch forcings) with periods of approximately 100,000, 41,000, and 21,000 years, which alter Earth's insolation through axial tilts, precessions, and eccentricities, initiating glacial-interglacial transitions. Solar activity variations, spanning cycles of 11, 22, 87, 210, and 1,500 years, exert dominant influence, as evidenced by correlations between solar minima—like the Maunder Minimum (1645–1715) and Dalton Minimum (1790–1830)—and historical cold spells, including frozen rivers and crop failures in Europe. Galactic orbital cycles around 143 million years further modulate cosmic ray influx, which Plimer links to cloud formation and albedo changes via atmospheric ionization. Additional mechanisms highlighted by Plimer include volcanic activity, both subaerial and submarine, which release vast CO2 quantities—natural sources accounting for 97% of annual emissions, dwarfing human contributions at 3%—and trigger short-term cooling via aerosols, as in the 1815 Tambora eruption that induced a "year without a summer." Oceanic processes, leveraging the oceans' immense heat capacity (the top 3.2 meters holding as much heat as the entire atmosphere), drive decadal oscillations (~30 years) and meridional overturning circulation, redistributing heat globally. Plate tectonics and continental drift reshape ocean basins and atmospheric patterns over millions of years, while supervolcanoes, asteroid impacts, and lunar tidal cycles (~18.6 years) introduce abrupt perturbations. Geological proxies, such as sediment layers, fossil distributions, and ore formations (e.g., post-glacial iron oxide caps ~8,000 years ago), provide empirical evidence for Plimer's assertions: the current 10,500-year interglacial includes over 9,000 years warmer than the present, with Roman and Medieval Warm Periods showing comparable temperatures without industrial CO2; sea levels and temperatures fluctuated more dramatically in the Holocene than measured today. He argues these records falsify claims of unprecedented anthropogenic dominance, as past ecosystems thrived under higher CO2 (up to 30%) and warmer conditions, with no observed runaway effects.

Debates on Specific Mechanisms (Volcanoes, El Niño, Sea Levels)

Plimer has contended that volcanic activity, particularly from the estimated 3.5 million submarine volcanoes on the ocean floor, emits substantial quantities of CO2 that are inadequately measured and exceed anthropogenic contributions when properly accounted for. In Heaven and Earth (2009), he claimed that volcanoes release more CO2 than global human activities, arguing that standard estimates from bodies like the USGS focus narrowly on subaerial eruptions and overlook diffuse seafloor degassing. This position has fueled debates, as peer-reviewed syntheses, including submarine fluxes, estimate total global volcanic CO2 emissions at 0.13–0.44 gigatons per year, compared to approximately 36 gigatons from human sources annually. Plimer maintains that such figures underestimate undetected hydrothermal and ridge-axis venting, emphasizing geological evidence of natural carbon cycling over short-term human impacts. Regarding El Niño, Plimer has proposed that these events are primarily driven by tectonic processes, including earthquake swarms and volcanic activity along mid-ocean ridges, rather than being independent oscillations of ocean-atmosphere coupling. He linked the 1982–1983 El Niño to heightened earthquake frequency and Earth's rotational changes in Heaven and Earth, suggesting subsurface mantle dynamics release heat and alter ocean currents, contributing to observed warming patterns without requiring dominant anthropogenic forcing. This view contrasts with mainstream models attributing El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) variability to equatorial Pacific wind and sea surface temperature feedbacks, though Plimer argues for underappreciated geothermal influences in long-term climate records. In public discussions, he has highlighted correlations between ridge volcanism, helium plumes, and ENSO phases to underscore natural drivers over CO2-driven mechanisms. On sea levels, Plimer asserts that current rises are modest extensions of post-glacial rebound, with rates declining from historical peaks and within natural variability seen over millennia. In Not for Greens (2014), he noted that the post-glacial sea level rise is slowing as expected from isostatic adjustments, projecting minimal additional rise—such as 5–10 cm from ice melt by 2100—far below alarmist forecasts. He has questioned satellite-era accelerations, asking why rates purportedly doubled upon measurement commencement, implying potential artifacts in tide gauge-to-altimetry transitions or neglect of local subsidence and tectonic uplift. Plimer further argues that atolls and low-lying islands adapt via coral accretion and sediment buildup during gradual rises, citing geological records where past higher seas did not submerge such features catastrophically. These claims participate in broader debates, where instrumental records show global mean sea level rising at 3.7 mm/year since 1993, accelerating from 1.4 mm/year in the 20th century, driven by thermal expansion and glacier mass loss. Heaven and Earth: Global Warming: The Missing Science, published in April 2009 by Connor Court Publishing, examines climate variability through a geological lens spanning 4.5 billion years, contending that assertions of unprecedented anthropogenic influence overlook natural forcings dominant in Earth's history. Plimer maintains that current atmospheric CO2 concentrations, at approximately 385 parts per million in 2009, represent a minor fraction of historical peaks exceeding 7,000 parts per million during periods like the Cambrian era, when no runaway greenhouse effect occurred despite vastly higher levels. He emphasizes that ice core records from Vostok and EPICA Dome C reveal CO2 rises lagging temperature increases by 800 years over glacial-interglacial cycles, positioning CO2 as an amplifier rather than initiator of warming. Plimer argues that human emissions, totaling around 29 gigatons of CO2 annually as of the late 2000s, pale against natural fluxes—such as oceanic outgassing estimated at 90 gigatons yearly and terrestrial respiration at 120 gigatons—rendering anthropogenic contributions less than 4% of the global carbon cycle. Drawing on stratigraphic and paleoclimatic data, he highlights episodes like the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum around 55 million years ago, where temperatures rose 5–8°C amid CO2 surges to 2,000 parts per million, yet ecosystems adapted without the mass extinctions predicted by modern alarmist models. Plimer further posits that solar irradiance variations, Milankovitch cycles, and cosmic ray influences on cloud formation better explain observed 20th-century warming trends than CO2 forcing, citing correlations between sunspot cycles and temperature proxies over millennia. In related public statements, Plimer has reiterated that Earth's dynamic systems—encompassing tectonic activity, volcanism, and orbital mechanics—have driven climate shifts far exceeding 20th-century changes, with sea levels fluctuating 120 meters post-Ice Age without human input. He challenges the omission of geological timescales in policy debates, arguing that for over 80% of geologic time, Earth maintained ice-free, tropical conditions conducive to life proliferation, undermining claims of CO2-driven peril at current levels. These positions, grounded in empirical rock records and isotopic analyses, position human-induced catastrophe as unsubstantiated relative to precedents like the Devonian's anoxic events or Jurassic hothouse states. Plimer's synthesis integrates disciplines from paleontology to geochemistry, asserting that ignoring such evidence perpetuates a politicized narrative detached from causal realities.

Copenhagen Climate Challenge and Public Advocacy

In December 2009, during the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP15) in Copenhagen, Plimer participated in the Copenhagen Climate Challenge, a parallel event organized by climate skeptics to counter the official proceedings. As a speaker, he presented geological perspectives on climate dynamics, arguing that Earth's climate history demonstrates repeated natural fluctuations far exceeding recent variations, driven by factors such as solar irradiance, tectonic activity, and cosmic influences rather than anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions. Plimer contended that policy responses to alleged climate crises overlook this long-term empirical record, prioritizing short observational datasets that fail to account for millennial-scale cycles. Plimer's address at the Challenge emphasized that human emissions constitute a minor fraction of natural CO2 fluxes, with submarine volcanoes alone releasing comparable volumes annually, and he criticized the attribution of sea-level rise and temperature anomalies solely to human activity without considering historical precedents like the Medieval Warm Period or Little Ice Age. He urged audiences to prioritize verifiable geological data over modeled projections, stating that humans are not fundamentally altering the planet's climate equilibrium. This intervention aligned with his broader thesis in Heaven and Earth (2009), positioning the event as a platform to challenge what he described as politicized science. Beyond the Copenhagen event, Plimer has engaged in extensive public advocacy against alarmist interpretations of climate data, appearing in Australian media debates, parliamentary submissions, and international forums to advocate for policies grounded in empirical earth sciences. In 2009–2010, he publicly opposed Australia's proposed emissions trading scheme, testifying that economic costs outweighed uncertain benefits given natural climate variability's dominance, influencing conservative political resistance to carbon pricing. His television debates, including with environmental journalist George Monbiot in December 2009, highlighted discrepancies in volcanic CO2 estimates and paleoclimate reconstructions, though critics from institutions like the IPCC contested his selective data use. Plimer's advocacy extends to op-eds and speeches, such as those critiquing the "climate industry" for conflating correlation with causation, consistently citing peer-reviewed geological studies on ice core records and sediment proxies to support claims of non-catastrophic variability.

Advocacy Against Pseudoscience

Critique of Creationism

Ian Plimer, a geologist with expertise in ore deposit formation and Earth history, has critiqued creationism as incompatible with empirical geological evidence, particularly young-Earth variants positing an age of 6,000 to 10,000 years. He argues that creationist interpretations of Genesis necessitate rejecting foundational scientific methodologies, including radiometric dating and stratigraphy, which demonstrate an Earth age exceeding 4.5 billion years through consistent isotopic ratios in zircon crystals and layered sedimentary records spanning eons. Plimer maintains that such denials overlook causal mechanisms like plate tectonics and erosion cycles, which explain fossil distributions and rock formations without invoking a global flood. In Telling Lies for God: Reason vs Creationism, published in 1994, Plimer systematically dissects arguments for literal Biblical creationism, contending they rely on selective data interpretation and factual distortions rather than testable hypotheses. He asserts that creationists fail to provide predictive models aligning with observations, such as the sequential fossil progression in strata or the absence of modern fauna in Precambrian layers, which empirical geology attributes to evolutionary timelines. Plimer attributes persistence of these views to non-scientific motivations, including ideological commitment over evidence, though he acknowledges theological interpretations need not conflict with science if non-literal. Plimer's advocacy extends to public and legal arenas, where he challenged creationist assertions of discovering Noah's Ark remnants in the 1990s, filing a defamation suit in 1994 against proponents claiming a Turkish site as biblical evidence; the Australian court dismissed core claims in 1997 for lack of substantiation, underscoring Plimer's emphasis on verifiable physical evidence over anecdotal reports. He has warned that pseudoscientific claims erode public trust in geology's predictive power, as seen in mining and resource exploration reliant on deep-time frameworks. While creationist responses, such as those from Answers in Genesis, rebut Plimer's characterizations as ad hominem, his geological critiques prioritize data from peer-reviewed stratigraphy over scriptural literalism.

Telling Lies for God: Exposing Methodological Flaws

In Telling Lies for God: Reason vs Creationism, published in 1994 by Random House Australia, Ian Plimer, a professor of geology at the University of Melbourne, systematically dissects the methodological shortcomings of creationist arguments, particularly those advanced by young-Earth proponents in Australia who interpret the Book of Genesis literally to assert a planetary age under 10,000 years and a global flood event. Plimer draws on his expertise in Earth sciences to argue that creationist methodologies deviate from empirical rigor by prioritizing scriptural authority over testable hypotheses, resulting in unfalsifiable claims that evade scientific scrutiny. He contends that this approach yields no predictive models or novel discoveries, unlike uniformitarian geology, which has underpinned advancements in resource exploration and paleontology. A core flaw Plimer identifies is selective literalism, where creationists apply a rigid, ahistorical reading to Genesis passages (e.g., six-day creation and Noah's flood) while dismissing metaphorical or contextual interpretations of other Biblical texts, trapping adherents in dogmatic inconsistencies when geological strata, radiometric dating, and fossil records contradict literal timelines. For instance, he critiques flood geology's inability to account for sorted sedimentary layers spanning billions of years, which require mechanisms beyond a single hydrological event, as evidenced by varve deposits and coral reef growth rates exceeding 6,000 years. Plimer documents how creationists misrepresent these datasets by invoking ad hoc accelerations in decay rates or erosion without supporting experiments, highlighting a methodological reliance on post-hoc rationalizations rather than predictive testing. Plimer further exposes patterns of intellectual dishonesty in creationist literature, including the systematic quotation of scientific sources out of context to imply support for Biblical literalism, fabrication of evidence (such as unsubstantiated claims of human footprints alongside dinosaur tracks), and evasion of peer-reviewed rebuttals through echo-chamber publications. He illustrates this with examples from Australian creationist groups like the Creation Science Foundation, which he accused of promoting pseudoscientific curricula in schools, prompting legal challenges that underscored the absence of methodological transparency in their "research." In contrast to scientific methodology's emphasis on reproducibility and falsification—hallmarks of Karl Popper's demarcation criteria—Plimer argues creationism functions as ideology masquerading as inquiry, impervious to disconfirming evidence like the 4.5-billion-year radiometric age of Earth zircons. The book's analysis extends to broader epistemological issues, such as creationists' rejection of methodological naturalism, which Plimer defends as essential for objective inquiry, untainted by supernatural assumptions that halt investigation at untestable propositions. Motivated by Plimer's prior debates and a 1980s court case involving creationist Allen Roberts, who sought to suppress critical materials, the work advocates for scientific education free from such flaws, though critics from creationist circles have countered that Plimer himself employs rhetorical excess and selective evidence. Nonetheless, Plimer's geological case studies, including polystrate fossils and hydrodynamic sorting experiments, reinforce his thesis that creationist methods fail causal realism by inverting evidence to fit preconceptions rather than deriving models from data. In 1997, Ian Plimer, alongside marine archaeologist David Fasold, initiated legal proceedings in the Federal Court of Australia against creationist Allen Roberts and the Ark Search Association Incorporated, challenging claims that a boat-shaped mound at the Durupinar site near Mount Ararat in Turkey constituted remnants of Noah's Ark. Plimer contended that Roberts' public lectures, publications, and fundraising activities— which raised over $50,000 AUD for expeditions—constituted misleading and deceptive conduct under section 52 of the Trade Practices Act 1974, as the geological evidence indicated the formation was a natural landslide rather than a biblical vessel preserved by supernatural means. This action represented an effort to apply consumer protection laws to curb the dissemination of pseudoscientific assertions that contradicted materialistic explanations of geological history, thereby defending empirical science against faith-based interpretations presented as factual. Roberts, an ordained minister affiliated with creationist groups, had promoted the site since the early 1990s through videos, books, and tours, asserting it matched biblical dimensions and contained petrified wood, despite contradictory analyses by geologists showing no anthropogenic artifacts. Plimer's suit argued that such representations deceived audiences into believing in a young-Earth flood narrative incompatible with stratigraphic and radiometric evidence spanning millions of years, framing the promotion as commercial exploitation rather than mere religious advocacy. Fasold's concurrent claim addressed copyright infringement over a drawing of the site used without permission. On June 2, 1997, Justice Ronald Sackville dismissed Plimer's primary Trade Practices Act claim, ruling that Ark Search's activities lacked the "system and continuity" required to qualify as trade or commerce, characterizing them instead as sporadic religious outreach rather than systematic business operations. Fasold prevailed on the copyright issue, receiving $2,500 AUD in damages, but Plimer was ordered to cover substantial legal costs exceeding $500,000 AUD for both parties, resulting in personal financial strain including the sale of his home. The outcome underscored limitations in leveraging commercial law to contest pseudoscientific claims rooted in religious belief, as courts prioritized distinguishing advocacy from profit-driven deception over adjudicating scientific validity. Plimer maintained that the proceedings illuminated methodological flaws in creationist arguments, such as selective evidence and disregard for uniformitarian geology, aligning with his broader materialist stance that natural processes alone explain Earth's history without invoking miracles. Despite the loss, the case contributed to public discourse by highlighting tensions between empirical scrutiny and protected expression, reinforcing Plimer's advocacy for prioritizing verifiable data over unsubstantiated supernatural narratives in educational and informational contexts.

Awards, Recognition, and Influence

Scientific and Professional Honors

Plimer was elected a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering in 1998, recognizing his contributions to earth sciences and mining geology. He holds honorary fellowship in the Geological Society of London, awarded for his defense of geological principles against pseudoscience. Additional fellowships include those of the Australian Institute of Geoscientists and the Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, reflecting his expertise in mineral deposits and economic geology. In 1995, Plimer received the ABC Eureka Prize for the Promotion of Science from the Australian Museum, cited for his use of geology to elucidate planetary history in public outreach. He earned a second Eureka Prize in 2002 for his book A Short History of Planet Earth, honoring excellence in science communication. The Clarke Medal from the Royal Society of New South Wales followed in 2004, awarded for distinguished research in geology. Plimer was granted the Centenary Medal in 2003 by the Australian government for service to science and education on the centenary of federation. Earlier, in 1994, he received the Michael Daley Prize (a precursor to the Eureka Prizes) from the Australian Museum for advancing scientific understanding through communication. These recognitions primarily stem from his geological research on ore genesis and volcanism, as well as efforts to counter non-empirical claims in science.

Impact on Policy and Public Debate

Plimer's skepticism of anthropogenic climate change has contributed to debates within Australian politics, particularly influencing conservative figures opposed to carbon pricing mechanisms. In 2009, Tony Abbott, then leader of the Liberal Party, cited Plimer's book Heaven and Earth in rejecting the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's findings, with Plimer later stating that his work converted Abbott to the skeptic position. This aligned with broader opposition to the Rudd government's proposed emissions trading scheme, which Plimer warned would devastate Australia's mining and agriculture sectors by imposing undue economic burdens. His public advocacy, including media appearances and writings, amplified calls against such policies, contributing to the political momentum that led to the scheme's initial defeat in the Senate in 2009. Under the Gillard Labor government, Plimer continued critiquing the carbon tax introduced in 2012, arguing it misrepresented natural climate variability and prioritized unproven models over geological evidence. His efforts, alongside those of mining interests and other skeptics, fueled public and parliamentary resistance, exemplified by his alignment with anti-tax campaigns funded by figures like Gina Rinehart. The tax's repeal in July 2014 by the Abbott government reflected this skepticism's policy traction, as Abbott's administration dismantled carbon pricing to reduce energy costs and regulatory burdens, echoing Plimer's emphasis on empirical geological data over alarmist projections. In public discourse, Plimer has shaped skepticism through high-profile engagements, such as his 2010 tour with Christopher Monckton across Australia, delivering lectures challenging consensus narratives on human-induced warming. His op-eds in The Australian and speeches, including at the Institute of Public Affairs' launches of skeptic compendia like Climate Change: The Facts 2025 in November 2024, have sustained debate by questioning policy reliance on contested CO2 attribution models. More recently, in September 2025, Plimer submitted evidence to the Australian Senate's Select Committee on Information Integrity on Climate Change and Energy, decrying regressive electricity pricing from green policies and highlighting geological precedents for variability, thereby influencing ongoing parliamentary scrutiny of energy legislation. These interventions have prompted counter-responses from consensus advocates but underscored divisions in policy formulation, prioritizing cost-benefit analysis grounded in historical data over precautionary measures.

Criticisms and Counterarguments

Responses from Climate Consensus Advocates

Climate consensus advocates, including physicist Ian Enting from the University of Melbourne, have critiqued Plimer's 2009 book Heaven and Earth for containing over 150 documented flaws, including mislabeled graphs, plagiarized sections, and at least 28 misrepresentations of cited scientific sources. Enting's point-by-point analysis argued that Plimer failed to substantiate his core claim that natural variability renders human CO2 emissions negligible, as the book selectively emphasized geological past events while ignoring modern instrumental data showing CO2 levels at 420 ppm in 2023—higher than any in the last 800,000 years per ice core records—and correlated with a 1.1°C global temperature rise since pre-industrial times. Specific rebuttals targeted Plimer's handling of CO2 dynamics, noting internal contradictions: while asserting on page 278 that "temperature and CO2 are not connected," he elsewhere attributed Cretaceous-era warmth (around 100 million years ago) to elevated CO2 and affirmed CO2's role in preventing planetary freezing via the greenhouse effect (pages 186, 411). Skeptical Science, operated by consensus advocate John Cook, highlighted this as evidence of inconsistent reasoning, arguing that past high-CO2 periods involved different solar output and continental configurations, not applicable to current rapid anthropogenic forcing where isotopic ratios confirm fossil fuel origins for the CO2 increase. Advocates also refuted Plimer's claim that volcanic emissions exceed human CO2 output, estimating the latter at 37 billion metric tons annually versus subaerial and submarine volcanic totals under 0.3 billion tons, per U.S. Geological Survey data; Enting documented this as one of multiple exaggerations, including unsupported assertions of the Medieval Warm Period being 2–3°C warmer than present (versus proxy estimates of 0.1–0.5°C regionally variable warmth). Climate scientist David Karoly described the book as "science fiction" due to such errors and lack of verifiable sourcing during a 2009 ABC Radio interview. In response to Plimer's 2011 book How to Get Expelled from School, which posed 101 questions challenging consensus views, the Australian Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency issued a 2012 rebuttal document addressing each, classifying about 20 as based on misleading or selective interpretations of data, such as ignoring equilibrium climate sensitivity estimates from IPCC assessments (1.5–4.5°C per CO2 doubling) supported by paleoclimate and modeling evidence. Common themes included Plimer's omission of attribution studies linking over 100% of recent warming to human factors, per Detection and Attribution research. Skeptical Science endorsed this as a resource countering Plimer's geological emphasis, which overlooks that Earth's climate system today operates under unprecedented radiative forcing from long-lived greenhouse gases.

Fact-Checks and Scientific Rebuttals

Ian Enting, a professor of atmospheric science at the University of Melbourne, conducted a systematic 64-page review of Plimer's 2009 book Heaven and Earth, identifying over 100 errors or misrepresentations, including distortions of IPCC reports and cited references that did not support Plimer's assertions on natural climate variability dominating human influence. Enting highlighted cases where Plimer selectively quoted or inverted the meaning of sources, such as claiming references proved Roman-era temperatures were 2–6°C warmer than present, whereas the cited works indicated regional variations of 0.6–2°C at most and lacked global substantiation. These analyses, drawn from Plimer's 2311 footnotes, revealed patterns of confirmation bias in geological data interpretation, undermining claims of "missing science" in anthropogenic warming. Plimer's assertion that global volcanic CO2 emissions, including from submarine sources, exceed human outputs by factors of 10 or more—estimated by him at 155 billion tonnes annually—contradicts geological surveys. The U.S. Geological Survey calculates total volcanic emissions (subaerial and submarine) at approximately 0.26–0.44 billion tonnes per year, or less than 1% of the 36–40 billion tonnes from human activities in recent decades. This discrepancy arises from Plimer's reliance on extrapolated mid-ocean ridge degassing rates without accounting for confirmed measurement constraints, as verified by isotopic and flux studies. Additional fact-checks have addressed Plimer's graphical misrepresentations, such as labeling post-1970s observed global temperature records as "computer predictions" to imply model failure, when the data reflect instrumental measurements corroborated by satellite and proxy records. Internal inconsistencies in Heaven and Earth include conflicting statements on CO2-temperature causality: Plimer argues high past CO2 levels caused no warming, yet elsewhere invokes CO2 forcing for cooling periods, revealing selective application of correlations without consistent mechanistic reasoning. These rebuttals, primarily from empirical data audits, emphasize verifiable discrepancies over interpretive disputes, though critics like Enting operate within institutions aligned with IPCC consensus, potentially influencing emphasis on anthropogenic factors. Recent claims by Plimer, such as since the , have been refuted by paleoclimate reconstructions showing current warming exceeds medieval levels by 0.5–1°C globally, based on multi-proxy datasets including rings, cores, and sediments. The U.S. EPA has similarly dismissed specific Plimer assertions, like negligible CO2 impact, as lacking factual basis, citing atmospheric accumulation rates matching signatures. Such evaluations factual errors in emission inventories and historical reconstructions, prioritizing measurements over unverified extrapolations.

Broader Reception in Academia and Media

In academic circles, Plimer's challenges to the prevailing consensus on anthropogenic climate change have been largely dismissed by , who contend that works like Heaven and (2009) contain numerous factual inaccuracies, selective usage, and misunderstandings of paleoclimate proxies and modern modeling. Reviews from programs, such as Ockham's , described the as failing to engage adequately with peer-reviewed , prioritizing geological long-term cycles over short-term influences. Similarly, analyses by groups like Skeptical Science highlighted internal contradictions in Plimer's arguments, such as varying claims on CO2's historical role without reconciling empirical discrepancies. While Plimer's expertise in garners in and earth sciences, his climate interventions are viewed as outside his specialty, with critics arguing they undermine rather than advance interdisciplinary . Media coverage of Plimer reflects polarization, with left-leaning outlets frequently portraying him as a denialist whose claims evade , as in Guardian critiques of his responses to leaked emails in 2009, which accused him of uncritical amplification of unverified narratives. In 2020, Australia's Press ruled that an op-ed by Plimer in The Australian breached accuracy standards by misrepresenting solar activity's in recent warming, prompting condemnation from experts for factual distortions. Conversely, conservative-leaning publications like The Australian have defended Plimer as a countervoice to alarmism, publishing his pieces despite rebukes and emphasizing his geological perspective on natural variability. This divide underscores broader tensions in reporting, where Plimer's prominence among skeptics sustains debate but invites regulatory and peer pushback in consensus-aligned media.

References

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