Module 4 Changes in Climate. Global Warming? Climate change –The pattern(s) of variation in climate (temperature, precipitation) over various periods.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
GEOS 112 Lecture Topics 4/28/03 Read Chapter 12 (Glaciers) Final Exam – Monday, May 5 1:00pm 1.Types of Glaciers; 2.Glacier Formation, Mass Balance, and.
Advertisements

Global Air temperature from 1850 The time series shows the combined global land and marine surface temperature record from 1850 to The year 2007.
Climate change can be discussed in short, medium and long timescales. Short-term (recent) climate change is on a timescale of decades, an example would.
Climatology Climatology is the study of Earth’s climate and the factors that affect past, present, and future climatic changes. Climate describes the long-term.
Climate and Climate Change 17 January How and Why Does Climate Change? Climate changes over a broad range of time scales – Years, decades, centuries,
1. What do we mean by "paleoclimate"? 2. What evidence exists for ice ages and ancient climate change? 3. What causes the climate to change? What we wish.
Sea-Tac. Glacial evidence In what way is a glacier like a water reservoir (other than they are both water)?
Myr ago Puzzle: Ice Ages! Occur with a period of ~ 250 million yr Cycles of glaciation within the ice age occur with a period of 40,000 yr Most recent.
Fossils, Paleoclimate and Global Climate Change. Global Warming CO 2 levels in the atmosphere rising Average global temperature is rising Polar ice caps.
Outline Review of Ocean Stratification and Circulation Recent historical Climate Change External Climate Forcings Natural Climate Variability Paleoclimatology.
Review: Wednesday 5:30 –6:30, Harshbarger 206. Last Class Review Milankovitch Cycles –Precession –Tilt –Eccentricity Variations in CO 2 and Climate Using.
Determining Past Climates Sediment cores Ice cores Oxygen isotope ratios Dendrochronology (tree rings )
Climatic changes in the last 200 years (Ch. 17 & 18) 1. Is it warming? --climate proxy info (recap) -- info from historical & instrumental records 2. What.
Past Climate.
Gyroscope.
CLIMATE CHANGE Global Temperatures: Past, Present, and Future.
Climate Chapter 14.
EARTH’S CLIMATE PAST and FUTURE SECOND EDITION CHAPTER 16 Climate Changes During the Last 1000 Years WILLIAM F. RUDDIMAN © 2008 W. H. Freeman and Company.
8.8 Energy Transfer within the Climate System. Air and Ocean Circulation  Sun hits earth at different intensities and latitudes  Water and land absorb.
Reviewing Climate Change Over Time Forcing Factors and Relevant Measurements.
Causes of Natural Variability
CE 401 Climate Change Science and Engineering orbital variations and climate, aerosols, carbon cycle 25 January 2011.
NATS 101 Section 13: Lecture 32 Paleoclimate. Natural changes in the Earth’s climate also occur at much longer timescales The study of prehistoric climates.
OC 450: Orbital Controls on Climate (Chaps 8 and 10) Main Points: Small cyclic variations in the earth’s orbital characteristics affect the distribution.
Class #35: Friday, November 201 Past Climates: Proxy Data and Mechanisms of Change.
 Climate change is a significant and lasting change in the weather patterns over periods ranging from decades to millions of years.
Climate Changes Past and Future. Defining Climate Change  Response of Earth-atmosphere system to changes in boundary conditions  What external factors.
Quaternary Environments Climate and Climatic Variation.
Chapter 14: Climate change The earth’s changing climate The earth’s changing climate Possible causes of climatic change Possible causes of climatic change.
NATS 101 Lecture 33 Natural Climate Variability. What is Climate Change? Climate change - A significant shift in the mean state and event frequency of.
17.3 Ice Age. What is an Ice Age? Thousands of years ago ice sheets covered much more of the Earth’s surface. Thousands of years ago ice sheets covered.
Chapter 11 Orbital-Scale Changes in Carbon Dioxide and Methane Reporter : Yu-Ching Chen Date : May 22, 2003 (Thursday)
Large-Scale Temperature Changes During the Past Millennium Michael E. Mann, Department of Environmental Sciences University of Virginia Smithsonian Environmental.
Reconstructing Climate History through Ice Core Proxies Natasha Paterson Econ 331 April 7 th, 2010.
THERMOHALINE CIRCULATION: THE GREAT OCEANIC CONVEYOR BELT.
SC.912.E.7.2: Analyze the causes of the various kinds of surface and deep water motion within the oceans and their impacts on the transfer of energy between.
Climate Change.
Climate and Climate Change Chapter 21
Orbital Forcing on Climate Finish Climates of Geologic Time Introduction to Orbital Factors Axial Tilt Axial Precession Changes in Earth’s eccentric orbit.
Climate Change Monday, November 5th. Anthropogenic Climate Change Thomas Jefferson, 1781 Notes on the State of Virginia –Springs are warmer –Less winter.
Climate Change November 4, Global Climate Change Global Warming – describes a rapid increase in the temperature of Earth’s surface, water, and atmosphere,
Class #39: Friday, April 171 Mechanisms of Climate Change Natural and Anthropogenic.
Wednesday March 23, 2011 (Ice Ages) (Period 5 Only: Video and Quiz – Oceans, Earth’s Last Frontier)
The Carbon Cycle and Climate Change
Discuss the relationship between climate and biomes.
i) Oxygen isotopes and climate /Kepler’s laws
Chapter 13: The Earth’s Changing Climate Climate change Climate change Possible causes of climatic change Possible causes of climatic change Global warming.
An Orbital Theory For Glacial Periods
Starter 2/19/15  Think about what the term “climate” means to you. List words that come to mind when you think of climate!!!
Causes of Global Warming. “Over the last few decades there’s been much more evidence for the human influence on climate…. We’ve reached the point where.
Ice Age Ice Age, a time when ice sheets and alpine glaciers were EXTENSIVE, and advanced and receded repeatedly over LONG PERIODS of time.
Climate Change. Causes Several factors affect global climate: 1.Changes in solar output 2.Changes in Earth's orbit 3.Changes in the distribution of continents.
Climate. Weather vs. Climate Weather – the condition of Earth’s atmosphere at a particular time and place. – Short-term: Hours and days – Localized: Town,
Causes of Global Warming. “Over the last few decades there’s been much more evidence for the human influence on climate…. We’ve reached the point where.
Unit 4: Climate Change Earth’s Climate System. Introduction Atmosphere: layer of gases that surrounds a planet or moon Without the atmosphere, days would.
The Earth’s Orbit and Climate
Climates of Geologic Time
Long and Short Term Changes in Climate
Earth’s Climate System
Long-term climate change & Short-term climate variability
Chapter 14: Climate Change
DO NOW Pick up notes and Review #25..
3.3 Explaining & Predicting Climate Change
The Earth’s Orbit and Climate
Climate Changes due to Natural Processes
Past Climates - the mechanisms
AOSC 200 Lesson 23.
The Earth’s Orbit and Climate
Chapter 13: The Earth’s Changing Climate
Changes in Climate and Feedback Loops
Presentation transcript:

Module 4 Changes in Climate

Global Warming? Climate change –The pattern(s) of variation in climate (temperature, precipitation) over various periods of time Global warming –The anticipated/apprehended increase in mean global temperature associated with the increase of greenhouse gases in the contemporary atmosphere

Historic Seal Level Rise

Looking back in time

A longer view

A much longer view

Instrumental Records The earliest records of temperature measured by thermometers are from western Europe beginning in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. The network of temperature collection stations increased over time and by the early 20th century, records were being collected in almost all regions, except for polar regions where collections began in the 1940s and 1950s.

Glacier ice cores Proxy Data

Other historical evidence

The last 1000 years Recent reconstruction of NH air temperature based on tree-ring, ice core, coral and historical evidence.

Vostok Ice Core (Antarctica)

So … different scales of time

Glacial Cycles By ~2.5 myr ago, temperatures began alternating by 4-10 o C every 40,000 to 100,000 years (quasi-periodic cycles). –Extensive glacial ice began to occur during the cold phases –Eventually, massive ice sheets formed over the land areas of the NH during glacial periods. –During each glaciation, the sea level on Earth was reduced by metres.

The last Ice Age

Vostok Ice Core (Antarctica)

Using oxygen isotope ratios Isotopes: atoms of different mass number (# neutrons in nucleus) When water evaporates, O18 is preferentially left behind, and O16 is preferentially stored in glacier ice Low values of the ratio correspond to a cold climate

The past 1 myr

The Ins and Outs of Ice Ages The detailed, long term records of oxygen isotope data reveal that the climate tends to drift slowly into glacial conditions, while interglacials tend to develop suddenly in the space of a few hundred years.

The past 1 myr

Should read ocean cores Back 2.5 myr

Why are there glacial cycles? The last 700,000 years are marked by wider swings in temperature that indicate a large shift in the amount of land ice present. –On the geologic time scale, the Earth seems to be getting cooler. There is good evidence that variations in the Earth’s solar orbit are linked to glacial cycles.

Orbital forcing The theory that large scale climate changes (glacials/interglacials) are due to the variations in precession, eccentricity and obliquity of the Earth’s solar orbit that affects the amount of solar radiation received at the surface of the Earth. –Attributed to Milankovitch

Orbital attributes The Earth has three fundamental orbital attributes: –Changes in the tilt of the axis of rotation (termed the obliquity) –Changes in the shape of the elliptical orbit around the sun (termed eccentricity) –Changes in the date of the Earth’s closest approach to the Sun (termed precession of the equinox)

The tilt of the Earth’s axis varies

Periods of variation The tilt of the Earth’s axis varies over a period of about 41,000 years The cycle of orbital eccentricity is 90,000 to 100,000 years The precession cycle of the equinox is about 23,000 years

Milankovitch Cycles

Should read ocean cores Back 2.5 myr

Milankovitch Cycles in the record

The previous figure indicates a dominant period in glacial variations of 41,000 years. – There are other significant cycles at 96, ,000 (and 23,000) years. These correspond to the cycles (and harmonics) in the Earth’s orbital variations.

Global Annual Temperature Trends: Source: Watson 2000

= increasing, = decreasing = increasing, = decreasing Global Precipitation Trends (% per decade) Source: Watson 2001

Extreme Precipitation Events in the U.S.