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Samayaluca Dune Field, south of Juarez, Chihuahua Global Climate Change
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Weather Related Hazards 1. Drought 2. Desertification 3. Heat waves 4. Snow and Ice 5. Hurricanes 6. El Niño
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Climate System: 5 parts Cryosphere (ice) Oceans Lithosphere Sun and internal earth heating Atmosphere
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Cryosphere: ICE Ice reflects solar energy Melting ice increases ocean volume Sea level was 130 m (425 feet) lower during last ice age (18,000 years ago)
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Albedo is reflectance of land Earth reflects about 30% of incident solar energy.
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Ocean influences climate Transfers of heat from tropics to polar regions (i.e., Gulf Stream)
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What causes sea level rise? Melting ice Hotter oceans have larger volume
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Barrier Islands Sea Level Rise
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1 meter rise2 meter rise 4 meter rise8 meter rise
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Sea-Level Rise
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Lithosphere Mountains influence weather Continents influence ocean currents Volcanism –Warms by adding greenhouse gases –Cools when ash blocks sunlight
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Solar energy input to Earth’s surface is 342 W/m 2. Heat flowing out of Earth’s deep interior is only 0.06 W/m 2.
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The Greenhouse Effect Without some natural greenhouse effect, Earth would be uninhabitable, average temperature below freezing
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Earth Temperature Normal: 14 o C (57 o F) Without greenhouse gases : -19 o C (-2 o F)
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Climate System Atmosphere –Nitrogen N 2 78% –Oxygen O 2 21% –Argon Ar 0.93% –Carbon dioxide CO 2 0.035% –Other minor gases 0.035%
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Greenhouse Gases CO 2, H 2 0 and methane (CH 4 ): Absorb and re-radiate radiation Insulates and raises Earth temperature
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GEOLOGIC RESERVOIRS Fossil organic carbon Fossil organic carbon Rock carbonates Rock carbonates Fossil- fuel burning (5.3 Gt/yr) Fossil- fuel burning (5.3 Gt/yr) OCEAN Cement production (0.1 Gt/yr) Land-use change: deforestation, agriculture (1.7 Gt/yr) Land uptake By new plant growth (1.9 Gt/yr) Ocean uptake by air-sea gas exchange (1.9 Gt/yr) Terrestrial biosphere LAND ATMOSPHERE The influence of Carbon on climate change
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GEOLOGIC RESERVOIRS Fossil organic carbon Fossil organic carbon Rock carbonates Rock carbonates Fossil- fuel burning (5.3 Gt/yr) Fossil- fuel burning (5.3 Gt/yr) OCEAN Cement production (0.1 Gt/yr) Land-use change: deforestation, agriculture (1.7 Gt/yr) Land uptake By new plant growth (1.9 Gt/yr) Ocean uptake by air-sea gas exchange (1.9 Gt/yr) Terrestrial biosphere LAND ATMOSPHERE Human activities release a total of 7.1 Gt of carbon into the atmosphere each year. New plant growth and air-sea gas exchange remove 3.8 Gt/yr,… …yielding a net atmospheric increase of 3.3 Gt/yr.
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Climate Change Understanding Natural Climate Variability: Use the geologic record to understand Earth Climate in the past (Uniformitarianism)
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Milankovitch cycles Related to variations in: 1. Eccentricity 2. Tilt of axis 3. Precession (wobble)
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All of these variables change the earth-sun distance
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Is Human-induced climate change possible?
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Long-term change can be assessed from ice cores, which record annual cycles of ice formation from snow.
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Temperature relative to present climate (°C) Thousands of years before present Relative carbon dioxide and methane concentrations High Low Key: Temperature CO 2 Methane Ice Ages Deglaciation Climate has been relatively warm and stable during the last 10,000 years.
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Years Temperature CO 2 concentration The 20th-century is clearly anomalous when compared with the last millennium. Northern Hemisphere temperature anomaly (°C) CO 2 concentration (ppm)
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Keeling Curve
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Years Temperature CO 2 concentration Global temperature anomaly (°C) A recent warming trend correlates with the increase in CO 2. CO 2 concentration (ppm)
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Atmospheric CO 2 Projections Under 3 Alternate Scenarios…. 2000 2020204020602080 2100 Year
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….and Estimated Average Surface Temperatures for Those Scenarios Uncertainty envelope due to lack of knowledge of climate system
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Feedback enhances warming Positive Feedback: –Amplifies changes in the system. –Temperature increase decreases Earth’s albedo by reducing snow and ice cover
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Evidence for Warming Weather is highly variable* Glaciers provide long-term trends
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1941
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2004
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Columbia glacier
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Greenland
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Weather Related Hazards 1. Drought 2. Desertification 3. Heat waves 4. Snow and Ice 5. Global Warming 6. El Niño
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Transition zones between deserts and humid areas are fragile
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Soil gets eroded by wind and water Productive land becomes degraded
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Human activity can stress the ecosystem Grazing Cutting trees for charcoal Some agriculture
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El Niño Pacific Ocean is pushed westward by trade winds Warm water off Peru is replaced by upwelling of cold, deep, nutrient-rich water Circulation reverses: El Niño 6 Year cycle Opposite extreme in weather patterns is La Nina
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El Niño Subtropical trade winds weaken Warm surface water remains in east Pacific Incessant rain to west coasts Fisheries suffer (no cold, nutrient-rich upwelling water)
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El Nino
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