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Everybody talks about the weather but nobody does anything about it. - Charles Dudley Warner METO 200 Spring 2002
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Outline for Lesson 1 and Lesson 2 Weather and Climate Atmospheric Hazards The Atmosphere a Part of the Earth System Composition of the Atmosphere Ozone Depletion Height and Structure of the Atmosphere The Carbon Cycle
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Ancient Greeks may have made the first attempt at climate classification. They devised a simple scheme of based on Earth-Sun relationships. 23.5 ° N 23.5 ° S WINTERLESS SUMMERLESS INTERMEDIATE
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German climatologist Wladimir Köppen devised a system to present the general world patterns climate. The system uses easily obtained data. Q. Any guess what criteria might be used? A. precipitation temperature
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Humid Tropical Dry Humid middle-latitude mild winters Humid middle-latitude severe winters Polar
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Typical Weather Map Mean Percentage of possible sunshine for November Typical Climatology Map
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Go to weather hazard images now……….
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The Atmosphere as Part of the Earth System. Earth’s Fours Spheres: - Atmosphere - Lithosphere - Hydrosphere - Biosphere
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Atmosphere The life giving gaseous envelope surrounding Earth
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Lithosphere The outer shell of Earth’s Surface
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Hydrosphere The water portion of our the planet
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….jungles in South America, grasslands and forests in North America, fish and kelp and whales in the ocean, birds in the air, animals on the farms, and people! Biosphere
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Dry Wet
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Where there is water, there is weather
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Most weather processes takes place in the Troposphere
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1. Troposphere- literally means region where air “turns over” -temperature usually decreases (on average ~6.5°C/km) with altitude 2. Stratosphere- layer above the tropopause, little mixing occurs in the stratosphere, unlike the troposphere, where “turbulent mixing” is common 3. Mesosphere- defined as the region where temperature again decreases with height. 4. Thermosphere- region with very little of the atmosphere’s mass. high energy radiation received by the thermosphere (high temperatures experienced). A small density of molecules (not much “heat” would be felt). Tropopause Stratopause Mesopause
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In meteorology it is helpful to refer to altitude as a certain pressure value rather than a height. 850 mb 1500 m (5000 ft) 700 mb 3000 m (10,000 ft) 500 mb 5500 m (18000) 300 mb 9000 m (30,000)
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The Jet Stream (located near the top of the troposphere) is important in the transfer of moisture (and energy) around the globe and, therefore, central to weather processes.
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500 mb is convenient to look at because this about the Middle of the tropopause.
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700 mb is a location in the tropopause where vertical motion is often measured.
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850 mb is good place to look for temperature changes….any thoughts why?
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Weather at the Earth’s surface is what we are interested in, but, processes aloft dictate our weather.
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N2N2 ArCO 2 O2O2 Inert Gases H2H2 N2ON2O CH 4 Trace Gases O3O3 CO SO2, NO2 C FC’s Tropospheric Composition
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