There is a strange correlation between paradox of young Sun (it had lower luminosity) and stable Earth temperature which was provided by higher greenhouse effect. As sun goes brighter, CO2 declined. It was even analyses as evidence of anthropic effects.
In his article “The Anthropic Principle in Cosmology and Geology” [Shcherbitsky, 1999], A. S. Shcherbakov thoroughly examines the anthropic principle’s effect using the historical dynamics of Earth’s atmosphere as an example. He writes: “It is known that geological evolution proceeds within an oscillatory regime. Its extreme points correspond to two states, known as the ‘hot planet’ and ‘white planet’… The ‘hot planet’ situation occurs when large volumes of gaseous components, primarily carbon dioxide, are released from Earth’s mantle...
As calculations show, the gradual evaporation of ocean water just 10 meters deep can create such greenhouse conditions that water begins to boil. This process continues without additional heat input. The endpoint of this process is the boiling away of the oceans, with near-surface temperatures and pressures rising to hundreds of atmospheres and degrees… Geological evidence indicates that Earth has four times come very close to total glaciation. An equal number of times, it has stopped short of ocean evaporation. Why did neither occur? There seems to be no common and unified saving cause. Instead, each time reveals a single and always unique circumstance. It is precisely when attempting to explain these that geological texts begin to show familiar phrases like ‘...extremely low probability,’ ‘if this geological factor had varied by a small fraction,’ etc...
In the fundamental monograph ‘History of the Atmosphere’ [Budyko, 1985], there is discussion of an inexplicable correlation between three phenomena: solar activity rhythms, mantle degassing stages, and the evolution of life. ‘The correspondence between atmospheric physicochemical regime fluctuations and biosphere development needs can only be explained by random coordination of direction and speed of unrelated processes—solar evolution and Earth’s evolution. Since the probability of such coordination is exceptionally small, this leads to the conclusion about the exceptional rarity of life (especially its higher forms) in the Universe.’”
There is a strange correlation between paradox of young Sun (it had lower luminosity) and stable Earth temperature which was provided by higher greenhouse effect. As sun goes brighter, CO2 declined. It was even analyses as evidence of anthropic effects.