Mapped: Inside Carbon Brief’s Cosmos database of 1.8 million climate studies
- By Leo Hickman
- Visuals and development Tom Pearson
This is the vast “cosmos” of academic literature and evidence that underpins humanity’s knowledge of climate change.
Every “star” – all 1.8m of them – represents one of the studies inside Carbon Brief’s Cosmos database.
The coloured “nebulae” and “galaxies” within this cosmos illustrate where clusters of studies share similar citations and, hence, areas of common academic focus.
For example, these two large circled areas resembling “nebulae” represent, at the broadest level, studies centred around the “physical sciences” (blue) and (yellow).
Zoom in closer and distinct “galaxy” clusters begin to emerge more clearly.
The large green area represents medical studies cited by climate studies. The smaller red area captures the fields of immunology and microbiology.
Both circles represent groups of studies relating to tropical diseases, such as malaria, but from the perspective of different scientific disciplines.
The larger coloured “stars” show the location of all the key studies contained within the “Cosmos 500” ranking of most-cited publications.
This one, for example, is the famous Stern Review published in 2006. Authored by the economist Nicholas Stern, the 700-page report was commissioned by the UK government to investigate and summarise the effects of global warming on the world economy.
As Carbon Brief’s analysis of the Cosmos database shows, it is the most-cited publication across all the reports ever published by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
Below is an interactive version of the “cosmos”.
Zoom in and out to view the various clusters, using the colour key to determine the topics.
Click on any of the Cosmos 500 “stars” to reveal OpenAlex’s primary metadata about the study.