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Module 7-section2* 50 points Potential Climate Impacts By CA-07 Class * Module 7 - section1 is the sources of global temperature measurements section that I did in the class. Global Warming • Temperature of the Earth Increasing! • Global Warming is not Uniform. • Why? Ice-Albedeo Feedback • Ice-Albedo feedback : high latitude warmer than the low latitude (3-5 0C) • However, permafrost is just a little bit different. • Permafrost = frozen soil. • When it melts, it becomes an active zone. • The water and heat from these active zones can become so strong that it could make holes in frozen lakes, causing more global warming. Green house gases • Warming is more intense in cold parts of earths surface • Land is hotter than water because water evaporates and carries heat away • Green house heat waves are very intense. In Europe 2003, 35k people were killed. Emergent Effects • Changes in global temp. rearranges weather patterns and water supply • A warmer world would increase rainfall, buy would not be efficiently distributed. Hadley Circulation • The equator heats up causing water vapor to rise and form rain clouds • As the water vapor warms it causes rainfall at the equator and drought in the subtropics (30 degrees North or South) Higher latitude storms • Global warming will cause the ice sheets to melt pushing massive amounts of water vapor into the air. • The increase in temp will create massive storms due to the high temp and water vapor being pushed into the air. Monsoons • Monsoons are driven by temperature difference • Different temperatures drive the winds to blow in different ways that dump the water as rainfall. • Monsoons are sensitive to change in temperature that drive them and make them stronger that tend to vary year to year. Droughts • Continental interiors are expected to dry out. • Areas on earth that are dry today, are expected to get drier; increasing likelihood of drought. • Droughts are driven by changes in the water cycle. • Drought is probably a more significant danger to agriculture than heat alone. • American southwest, Mediterranean, and Australia are already undergoing drought conditions. Plants Transpiration • Transpiration is essentially evaporation of water from plants leaves. • Water is necessary for plants, but only small amount, which is taken up by the roots is used for growth and metabolism. Glaciers • Are melting during summer, this increases the sea level. • Creates social problems- water supply. Water Vapor • • • • Warmer air equals more water vapor More water vapor equals more energy More energy equals more rain Stronger storms as a result of this Tropical cyclones • Hurricanes may get more intense and prevalent in a warmer world.( a warmer world would be stormier) • Every year there are about 90 tropical storms, 40 of them become cyclones. • Storms grow from combinations of winds and pressures which is serve as seeds for storm. • The seeds of storm are determined by the structure of winds in the air, whether they blow in the same directions or in different directions at different altitudes. Hurricanes • Hurricanes draw their power from water vapor and warm air over oceans • They will not form if the Surface Sea Temperature is below 26 degrees Celsius • Their birth and growth is affected by subtleties in the atmosphere and oceans • A warmer world would lead to more frequent and more powerful hurricanes • Cyclones gain power from high winds drawing cold water from the ocean and warm air together Storm surge • Storm surge equals a rise in sea level • Low pressure in the center of the storm pulls water up • Winds blow water up in a pile • New Orleans was flooded because of this Ice and Sea Level • Why does the sea level rise? -Thermal expansion: when water gets warmer it expands - Land ice melting (sea ice, glaciers, mice sheets, ice shelves) Ice and Sea Level • Archimedes’ Principle- ice already in sea does not raise sea levels, it displaces its own weight in the water. Ice on land increases sea levels • Greenland and Antarctica ice sheets hold most of the water. • Mountain glaciers respond quickly to climate • Greenland Ice sheets-air at the base is close to melting temp. if 2 Celsius warmer, would raise sea level by 7 m Ice and Sea Level (cont) • IPCC forecast sea level to rise from 0.1 to .5m by end of the century • It would take thousands of years to melt Antarctica and Greenland • Scientists still are not fully sure on all the factors that cause ice to melt Ice and Sea Level (cont) • Sea level depends on the total volume of water in the ocean • Also depends on geological movement • As a result of melting ice sheets • Isostasy- the earths crust floats on the mantle • Subtract the melted ice weight & crust will float higher • Vertical motion in other parts of the world • Rise in vertical motion • Bangladesh is being swept away Human Impacts • Warming climate due to changes in water availablility • Climate changes affect crop yeilds because corn is sensitive to heat spikes – Less corn per season • Increasing CO2 helps plants deal with water stress • Farmers will have to plant different crops in the future Human Impacts • Number of species on Earth is decreasing due to human land use • Climate change contributes to extinction because it forces natural ecosystems to relocate • This is due to human land use and industrializing their habitats Human impact • Rising temperatures are widening the areas that tropical diseases are able to effect • Tropical disease has a significant impact but is not the most important reason to combat global warming • The impact of global warming is more likely to effect tropical and third world countries where there are less resources to buffer set backs. HW-6: Due Oct 29th 1) Explain briefly why Global warming is not globally uniform (Include 5 factors in your discussion). 2) What is the role of vegetation in a drought? 3) Why do some kinds of ice on Earth change the sea level when they melt and other kinds do not?