AbstractFor years, carbon cycle scientists have sought to understand how a warming climate will impact the decay of soil carbon. However, there have been relatively few investigations of how soils will warm in comparison to the atmosphere. Three recent papers in American Geophysical Union journals have looked at expected soil warming by synthesizing predictions in the Climate Model Intercomparison Project 5 (CMIP5). Collectively, these papers show that soil warming will keep pace with air warming except where snow and ice occur, and that the magnitude of soil warming in northern latitudes is uncertain due to model variability in snow and ice extent. They also show that a considerable portion of anthropogenic warming is being stored in deep soils, and that in comparison to observations, soil heat storage is underrepresented by land models. These studies highlight how important continued investigations of soil climatology are to understanding carbon cycling and Earth energy balance.