Hmmm.
I hadn't realised ice core isotopic temperature calculations were that precise. It wasn't that long ago that they changed some of the constants used in the formulae due to variations discovered in the relationships within glaciers, ocean water, and the temperature inside. Fascinating.
Paleoclimatology is amazing. There are graphs tracking the last 500 million years of climate and that is indeed how they ascertain the correlation between carbon dioxide and temperature.
I thought both the Medieval Climate Optimum and the Little Ice Age (which included the "Year Without a Summer") were both shifts of roughly 1 degree?
I'm using Celsius if that makes a difference, but the Little Ice Age was over a much longer period and so wasn't nearly as quick as today's global warming. Also, there is debate whether or not it was indeed a global phenomenon. It is interesting though, as the picture of Washington crossing the Deleware River amongst small ice chunks and pouring snow is likely a very rare sight today.
The same is true of the Medieval Optimum which was over a long period of time (3 to 4 centuries).