
climate change
... temperature change across south east Australia, with consistently warmer temperatures each decade since the 1950s. The fine line indicates the annual average, while the bars show the 10-year average. The central image represents a typical summer and shows the regional variation in temperatures in so ...
... temperature change across south east Australia, with consistently warmer temperatures each decade since the 1950s. The fine line indicates the annual average, while the bars show the 10-year average. The central image represents a typical summer and shows the regional variation in temperatures in so ...
Summary of Downscaling Methods
... and usually used to produce time series (e.g., daily) of a climate variable or sets of climate variables (precipitation, temperature, solar radiation) • Parameters of weather generator are then conditioned on large scale predictors, such as the NAO or ENSO. ...
... and usually used to produce time series (e.g., daily) of a climate variable or sets of climate variables (precipitation, temperature, solar radiation) • Parameters of weather generator are then conditioned on large scale predictors, such as the NAO or ENSO. ...
Objective of Downscaling
... and usually used to produce time series (e.g., daily) of a climate variable or sets of climate variables (precipitation, temperature, solar radiation) • Parameters of weather generator are then conditioned on large scale predictors, such as the NAO or ENSO. ...
... and usually used to produce time series (e.g., daily) of a climate variable or sets of climate variables (precipitation, temperature, solar radiation) • Parameters of weather generator are then conditioned on large scale predictors, such as the NAO or ENSO. ...
Hilda Blanco - Urban Water Institute, Inc.
... Key Message: Water Resources Management In most U.S. regions, water resources managers and planners will encounter new risks, vulnerabilities, and opportunities that may not be properly managed within existing practices. NCA (2014) Water Supply http://nca2014.globalchange.gov/highlights/report-findi ...
... Key Message: Water Resources Management In most U.S. regions, water resources managers and planners will encounter new risks, vulnerabilities, and opportunities that may not be properly managed within existing practices. NCA (2014) Water Supply http://nca2014.globalchange.gov/highlights/report-findi ...
JEDC_email_exchange_1
... website sadly lacks any information about how to notify Elsevier staff of errors in one of the journal’s papers. I am writing to draw your attention to a number of small but significant errors in a paper which was published by the ‘Journal of Economic Dynamics & Control’ in 2013. I believe they requ ...
... website sadly lacks any information about how to notify Elsevier staff of errors in one of the journal’s papers. I am writing to draw your attention to a number of small but significant errors in a paper which was published by the ‘Journal of Economic Dynamics & Control’ in 2013. I believe they requ ...
Reconsidering the Climate Change Act
... 4. The claims that the earth has been warming, that there is a greenhouse effect, and that man’s activities have contributed to warming, are trivially true and essentially meaningless in terms of alarm. Nonetheless, they are frequently trotted out as evidence for alarm. For example, here is the res ...
... 4. The claims that the earth has been warming, that there is a greenhouse effect, and that man’s activities have contributed to warming, are trivially true and essentially meaningless in terms of alarm. Nonetheless, they are frequently trotted out as evidence for alarm. For example, here is the res ...
Earths Climate History How do we know what we know
... The snow that forms most glacial ice develops a higher concentration of light oxygen During glacial periods, more and more light oxygen is locked up in ice sheets, changing the ratio of light to heavy in the oceans. ...
... The snow that forms most glacial ice develops a higher concentration of light oxygen During glacial periods, more and more light oxygen is locked up in ice sheets, changing the ratio of light to heavy in the oceans. ...
Global Climate Change The Fraudulent Claims & The Science
... March 2009 that “there was widespread skepticism among his colleagues about the UN-IPCC 4th & 7th assessment report that most of the observed global temperature increase since the mid-20th century ‘is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gas ...
... March 2009 that “there was widespread skepticism among his colleagues about the UN-IPCC 4th & 7th assessment report that most of the observed global temperature increase since the mid-20th century ‘is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gas ...
Climate Change and Global Warming
... that humans are causing global warming and climate change. Most of the leading science organizations around the world have issued public statements expressing this, including international and U.S. science academies, the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and a whole host of re ...
... that humans are causing global warming and climate change. Most of the leading science organizations around the world have issued public statements expressing this, including international and U.S. science academies, the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and a whole host of re ...
No Slide Title
... simulations with various forcings and scenarios Understand model response to changes of forcing a. single model--sensitivity experiments with CCSM ...
... simulations with various forcings and scenarios Understand model response to changes of forcing a. single model--sensitivity experiments with CCSM ...
Climates can change suddenly or slowly.
... by warmer periods in which ice sheets shrink back toward the poles. We are living in one of these warmer periods. Average global temperatures are now 5°C to 10°C (9–18°F) higher than they were during the last ice age. Only Greenland and Antarctica have large ice sheets today. Various sources of evid ...
... by warmer periods in which ice sheets shrink back toward the poles. We are living in one of these warmer periods. Average global temperatures are now 5°C to 10°C (9–18°F) higher than they were during the last ice age. Only Greenland and Antarctica have large ice sheets today. Various sources of evid ...
8 Appendix other age.. - The Work of Malcolm Roberts
... The rationale was put more crudely in an e-mail from a top Academy office-bearer, who said the booklet was written “to help resolve many issues which have been deliberately rendered obscure by climate change deniers … and the AAS imprimatur helps its credibility.”[70] The rest of Lambeck’s speech in ...
... The rationale was put more crudely in an e-mail from a top Academy office-bearer, who said the booklet was written “to help resolve many issues which have been deliberately rendered obscure by climate change deniers … and the AAS imprimatur helps its credibility.”[70] The rest of Lambeck’s speech in ...
374Gambia
... one of the most vulnerable countries in Africa to the adverse impacts of climate change , Approximately 50% of the total land area is less than 20m above sea level, One Third (1/3) of the country is below 10m above mean sea level and about 20% is annually flooded Mangrove ecosystems are affected by ...
... one of the most vulnerable countries in Africa to the adverse impacts of climate change , Approximately 50% of the total land area is less than 20m above sea level, One Third (1/3) of the country is below 10m above mean sea level and about 20% is annually flooded Mangrove ecosystems are affected by ...
Penny Whetton
... Median % rainfall change in 2030, relative to 1990, for a medium emissions scenario (stippling shows where at least 67% of models agree on the direction of change) CSIRO Climate change: the latest science ...
... Median % rainfall change in 2030, relative to 1990, for a medium emissions scenario (stippling shows where at least 67% of models agree on the direction of change) CSIRO Climate change: the latest science ...
for immediate release
... Increase in risk of dengue, malaria and other social safety nets so as to allow infectious diseases in some areas. households to better cope with climate The Amazon rainforest could shrink by 20 percent shocks, and improving the functioning of to 80 percent if temperatures increase by 2 to 3oC lan ...
... Increase in risk of dengue, malaria and other social safety nets so as to allow infectious diseases in some areas. households to better cope with climate The Amazon rainforest could shrink by 20 percent shocks, and improving the functioning of to 80 percent if temperatures increase by 2 to 3oC lan ...
Some issues re. climate science - School of Mathematics and Statistics
... • These changes cannot be explained by known modes of natural variability (i.e., solar cycles, …) ...
... • These changes cannot be explained by known modes of natural variability (i.e., solar cycles, …) ...
Public Perceptions of Climate Change: Key Trends and Emerging
... • Recognise the effects (heat, melting glaciers) but don’t spontaneously connect these with anthropogenic causes (energy use, deforestation) • Many causes (e.g. electricity use) and some consequences (ocean acidification) ‘invisible’ in everyday life Lorenzoni and Pidgeon (2006) Climatic Change, 77, ...
... • Recognise the effects (heat, melting glaciers) but don’t spontaneously connect these with anthropogenic causes (energy use, deforestation) • Many causes (e.g. electricity use) and some consequences (ocean acidification) ‘invisible’ in everyday life Lorenzoni and Pidgeon (2006) Climatic Change, 77, ...
Eos
... Humans are recognized as having a major role in influencing environmental variability and change, including their influence on the climate system. To advance scientists’ understanding of the role of humans within the climate system, there remains a need to resolve which of the following three hypothes ...
... Humans are recognized as having a major role in influencing environmental variability and change, including their influence on the climate system. To advance scientists’ understanding of the role of humans within the climate system, there remains a need to resolve which of the following three hypothes ...
Extended Abstract
... following the last Ice Age, which slowly took place over long periods of time, these forecast variations are expected to occur suddenly with the average rate of warming probably greater than any seen in the last 10,000 years (fig 1). Many species attempting to adapt to this rapidly changing climate ...
... following the last Ice Age, which slowly took place over long periods of time, these forecast variations are expected to occur suddenly with the average rate of warming probably greater than any seen in the last 10,000 years (fig 1). Many species attempting to adapt to this rapidly changing climate ...
climate changes
... Including temperature increases due to CO2, a net negative impact in tropics/subtropics for all crops (C3 and C4) ...
... Including temperature increases due to CO2, a net negative impact in tropics/subtropics for all crops (C3 and C4) ...
Climatic Research Unit documents

Climatic Research Unit documents including thousands of e-mails and other computer files were stolen from a server at the Climatic Research Unit of the University of East Anglia in a hacking incident in November 2009. The documents were redistributed first through the blogosphere of global warming skeptics, and allegations were made that they indicated misconduct by leading climate scientists. A series of investigations rejected these allegations, while concluding that CRU scientists should have been more open with distributing data and methods on request. Precisely six committees investigated the allegations and published reports, finding no evidence of fraud or scientific misconduct. The scientific consensus that global warming is occurring as a result of human activity remained unchanged by the end of the investigations.The incident occurred shortly before the opening December 2009 Copenhagen global climate summit. It has prompted general discussion about increasing the openness of scientific data (though the majority of climate data have always been freely available). Scientists, scientific organisations, and government officials have stated that the incident does not affect the overall scientific case for climate change. Andrew Revkin reported in the New York Times that ""The evidence pointing to a growing human contribution to global warming is so widely accepted that the hacked material is unlikely to erode the overall argument.""