Evidence for Hypotheses and Theories - StudyPulse
Boost Your VCE Scores Today with StudyPulse
8000+ Questions AI Tutor Help
Home Subjects Environmental Science Evidence for hypotheses

Evidence for Hypotheses and Theories

Environmental Science
StudyPulse

Evidence for Hypotheses and Theories

Environmental Science
01 May 2026

Evidence That Supports or Refutes Hypotheses, Models and Theories

A central skill in scientific inquiry is evaluating whether evidence supports or refutes a scientific hypothesis, model or theory. This requires understanding what hypotheses, models and theories are, and what forms of evidence are relevant.

Key Scientific Terms

Term Definition Environmental Science Example
Hypothesis A testable, falsifiable prediction about the relationship between variables ‘Greater vegetation cover increases bird SID’
Model A simplified representation of a real system used to explain or predict phenomena Climate model (GCM) predicting temperature response to emissions
Theory A well-substantiated explanation supported by extensive evidence from multiple lines of inquiry The theory of evolution by natural selection; plate tectonic theory

A hypothesis is tentative and specific; a theory is robust and broadly supported.

The Hypothetico-Deductive Method

Scientific inquiry follows a logical structure:

  1. Observation: Notice a pattern or anomaly requiring explanation
  2. Hypothesis: Propose a tentative explanation (prediction)
  3. Prediction: Deduce what data we would expect to observe IF the hypothesis is true
  4. Test: Collect data systematically
  5. Evaluation: Does the data match the prediction?
  6. If yes: hypothesis is supported (not ‘proven’)
  7. If no: hypothesis is refuted (not ‘disproved’) — but could be revised

Falsifiability: A good hypothesis must be potentially falsifiable — there must be possible observations that could contradict it.

What ‘Support’ and ‘Refute’ Mean

Outcome Meaning Implication
Supports Data is consistent with the hypothesis; observations match predictions Hypothesis remains viable; collect more evidence
Refutes Data is inconsistent with the hypothesis; key predictions are not met Hypothesis should be revised or rejected

Important: A hypothesis is never ‘proven’ beyond all doubt by a single study. Strength comes from repeated testing across diverse conditions. A hypothesis is only rejected if it is consistently contradicted across rigorous, independent studies.

Evidence and Climate Change Hypotheses

Hypothesis: “The recent increase in global average temperature is caused by human greenhouse gas emissions.”

Supporting evidence:
- CO$_2$ concentrations and temperature rise correlate precisely with industrial era emissions
- Isotopic analysis of atmospheric CO$_2$ shows increasing proportion of fossil-fuel-derived carbon
- Climate models including human GHG forcing reproduce observed temperature rise; models without human forcing do not
- The pattern of warming (e.g. stratospheric cooling while troposphere warms) matches the GHG mechanism specifically — not solar activity
- Multiple independent datasets (temperature records, sea level, ice extent) all show consistent trends

Potentially refuting evidence that was NOT found:
- If solar output had increased proportionately with temperature rise — it hasn’t
- If stratosphere had warmed alongside troposphere — it has cooled, consistent with GHG warming
- If warming stopped when ocean oscillation changed — it hasn’t

Evidence for Models

Climate models are not hypotheses but tools for understanding and prediction. Evidence that a model is reliable includes:

  • Model accurately reproduces historical observed climate (hindcasting)
  • Model predictions made in the past that were subsequently observed to be correct
  • Multiple independent models (from different institutions, using different code) reaching similar conclusions
  • Model results match physical theory (energy conservation, atmospheric physics)

Model limitations reduce confidence:
- Models may not adequately represent: clouds; small-scale ocean processes; permafrost feedbacks; human behavioural responses
- Regional projections have more uncertainty than global ones

Using Evidence in VCAA Investigations

When writing up an investigation, students must:
1. State clearly whether data supports or does not support the hypothesis
2. Justify this with reference to specific data (trend direction, magnitude, SID values etc.)
3. Acknowledge limitations that reduce confidence in the conclusion
4. Avoid claiming data ‘proves’ the hypothesis

Language guidance:
- ‘The data supports the hypothesis because…’
- ‘The results are consistent with the hypothesis that…’
- ‘The hypothesis cannot be supported because…’
- ‘This conclusion is limited by…’

VCAA FOCUS: A common error is stating ‘the results prove the hypothesis’. Scientific evidence supports or refutes — it does not prove. VCAA also frequently asks students to distinguish between correlation and causation in environmental data.

Table of Contents