URGENT action is need to avoid major world flooding with a billion people worldwide hit through prehistoric levels of climate change, a new Scots study has warned.

The research involving looking at historic carbon dioxide levels warns that despite efforts to cut greenhouse gases the last time CO2 was as high as it is now it was warm enough for beech trees to grow on Antarctica and enough ice melted to raise sea level by 20 metres.

The study led by the University of St Andrews says that that sea level rise would mean there would be a billion people worldwide whose homes would be flooded, along with major flooding of at least 25 of the world’s largest cities.

It comes as a separate WWF study highlighted what is at stake for 12 species from around the world, including two key Scottish species should the upcoming CO26 climate talks in Glasgow fail to reach agreement on keeping temperature rises below 1.5 degrees.

The Scots scientists collected data spanning the last 66 million years, to provide new insights into the kinds of climates we can ultimately expect if CO2 levels continue to rise at the current rate.

They say the projected rise would result in prehistoric levels of warmth that have never been experienced by humans.

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The study, published in the scientific journal Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences provides the most complete history to date of how CO2 has changed over the last 66 million years, the time since dinosaurs last roamed the planet.

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The authors say the data collected shows more clearly than ever before the link between CO2 and climate.

Working with colleagues from Texas A&M University, the University of Southampton and the Swiss University ETH Zürich, the international team pulled together data collected over the last 15 years using high-tech laboratory Techniques. Samples were taken from cores of mud from the deep-sea floor, where microscopic fossils and ancient molecules accumulate, preserving a story of what CO2 and the climate looked like at the time.

By firing these ancient atoms through super sensitive instruments, scientists can detect the chemical fingerprints of past changes in CO2, which can be compared with present day changes. For example, the study explains, through fossil fuel burning and deforestation, how humans have now driven CO2 back to levels not seen since around 3 million years ago.

Dr James Rae, from the University of St Andrews School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, who led the international team said: “If we allow fossil fuel burning to continue to grow, our grandchildren may experience CO2 levels that haven’t been seen on Earth for around 50 million years, a time when crocodiles roamed the Arctic.”

He added: “CO2 has transformed the face of our planet before, and unless we cut emissions as quickly as possible, it will do it again.”

At COP26 in Glasgow this November, politicians will work on international agreements to lower CO2 emissions to net-zero levels, and prevent CO2 rising further.