If you are actually asking about Climatologists that believe man is not a significant factor, that is easy. Everyone realizes that climate changes. The focus is on man being part or the major part of that change.
There are many that do.
Some of the bigger names are:
Dr. Roy Spencer (NASA Climatologist)
Dr. Robert C. Balling of Arizona State University
That list is off the top of my head. Climatatology is a very specialized field though. Most people that work in the field do not have specialized degrees in that field, but carry Physics degrees or other college degrees. None of the IPCC scientists carried this specialized degree. Opening the field to this level the list goes into the tens of thousands.
Why We Disagree About Climate Change was created on 2009-04-30.
Because the climate change
historical climate change effect on current biogeography.climate change has important implication.
The ozone layer is very important to climate change. It's depletion can cause climate adversity.
However
The ISBN of Why We Disagree About Climate Change is 978-0521727327.
Why We Disagree About Climate Change has 432 pages.
Why We Disagree About Climate Change was created on 2009-04-30.
Climatologists study the climate, its causes and changes.
Kind of like meteorologists, except they study climate, not weather.
There are so many variables to climate and weather climatologists make use of these computers.
Nearly all climatologists believe that mankind's activities are warming the planet. They cannot be confident about exactly what will happen as it's too difficult to predict with certainty,
A climatologist examines the changes in the climate and endeavor to predict long term forecasts. Climatologists are unlike meteorologists who study climate changes in the short term.
A climatologist examines the changes in the climate and endeavor to predict long term forecasts. Climatologists are unlike meteorologists who study climate changes in the short term.
Climatologists, those who practice climatology (study of the periodicity of weather events over years to millennia, as well as changes in long-term average weather patterns, in relation to atmospheric conditions) study both the nature of climates - local, regional or global - and the natural or human-induced factors that cause climates to change. Climatology considers the past and can help predict future climate change.
Climatologists use the Köppen climate classification system, which was developed in 1918 by Wladimir Köppen. This system categorizes climates based on temperature and precipitation patterns to help understand and distinguish different climate regions around the world.
By examining tree rings and ice core samples, climatologists are able to determine the environmental and climate situation prevalent at the time the tree was growing and when the water froze.