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Causes of Climate Change Think: What is climate change? (key words you have heard on the news, important impacts, etc) Global Climate Change http://www.s-cool.co.uk/topic_quicklearn.asp?loc=ql&topic_id=7&quicklearn_id=6&subject_id=20&ebt=101&ebn=&ebs=&ebl=&elc=4
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Use the following words to fill the blanks and then stick it in: extreme temperature absorb hotter hurricanes atmosphere climate increase What is Climate Change? Climate change: The Earth's ________ has been changing for hundreds of millions of years. Climate change doesn't necessarily mean things will get _______; most places will see more _________ weather (e.g. heavier rainfall, more snow, longer droughts, more _________, and more heat waves). Global warming: the _________ in the average ____________ of the Earth's near-surface air and oceans in recent decades and the future. Most of the observed increase since the mid-20th century is likely due to the Greenhouse Effect (greenhouse gases such as CO2 __________ outgoing heat from the Earth and trap it in the ___________). Recap
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Aim To understand the climate change is driven by multiple factors that are often interlinked.
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The Sun’s output is not constant. Cycles have been detected that reduce or increase the amount of solar energy. Over 2000 years ago Chinese astronomers started to record sunspots. These are black areas on the surface of the sun. Sometimes the sun has lots of these spots. At other times they disappear. Even though the spots are dark, they tell us that the sun is more active than usual. Lots of spots mean more solar energy being fired out from the sun towards Earth. Cooler periods, such as the Little Ice Age, and warmer periods, such as the Medieval Warm Period, may have been caused by changes in sunspot activity. Some people think that, on average, there were more volcanic eruptions during the Little Ice Age, and that this added to the cooling. However, climate change on timescales of a few hundred years, and 1-2°C, cannot be explained by volcanoes – but it might be explained by sunspot cycles. Temperatures are greatest when there are plenty of sunspots – because it means other areas of the Sun are working even harder!
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Sunspots The sun rotates around a vertical pole just like the earth. The sun is constantly producing vast amounts of radiation, which cause a strong magnetic field from one pole to another. The sun’s rotation then causes this magnetic field to be spun around itself tightly, storing energy like a twisted rubber band. This energy can be released, such an explosion appears as a pair of sunspots, each of which is significantly colder than the rest of the sun’s surface. The actual temperature of the sun’s surface determines how much radiation we receive at the surface of the earth. These cycles of increased sunlight activity occur with a period of about 11 years. Sunspots and global temperatures are loosely associated with -- but are not thought to be a major driver of -- climate change.
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Over very long timescales, there have been big changes in climate. Cold glacial periods and ice ages were 5-6°C colder than today. Some interglacials were 2-3°C warmer than today. Such big changes need a big cause. Scientists think they know what it is – changes in the way the Earth orbits the sun. You might think that the Earth’s orbit does not change, but over very long periods it does. The Earth’s orbit is sometimes circular, and sometimes more of an ellipse (oval) The Earth’s axis tilts. Sometimes it is more upright, and sometimes more on its side. The Earth’s axis wobbles, like a spinning top about to fall over. These three changes alter the amount of sunlight the Earth receives. They also affect where sunlight falls on the Earth’s surface. On timescales of thousands of years, the changes would be enough to start an ice age, or end one. These changes are called Milankovitch Cycles.
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Milankovitch Cycles
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Big volcanic eruptions can change the Earth’s climate. Small eruptions have no effect – the eruption needs to be very large and explosive. Volcanic eruptions produce ash and sulphur dioxide gas. If the ash and gas rise high enough, they will be spread around the Earth in the stratosphere by high level winds. The blanket of ash and gas will stop some sunlight reaching the Earth’s surface. Instead, the sunlight is reflected off the ash and gas, back into space. This cools the planet and lowers the average temperature. In 1991, Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines erupted, releasing 17 million tonnes of sulphur dioxide. This was enough to reduce global sunlight by 10%, cooling the planet by 0.5 ° C for about a year. Mount Pinatubo was very small-scale compared to the 1815 eruption of Tambora in Indonesia. This was the biggest eruption in human history. In 1816, temperatures around the world were so cold that it was called ‘the year without a summer’, and up to 200 000 people died in Europe as harvests failed. The effects lasted for four to five years. Sunlight reaching earth was reduced by 10%. The 1883 explosion of Krakatoa is believed to have reduced world temperatures by 1.2°C for at least one year afterwards.
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The natural causes of climate change Long term changes (may last for many centuries) Short term changes (lasting just a few years) The orbital theoryThe sunspot theoryThe eruption theory
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