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Climate Change Chapter 18 Global Change Population growth Distribution of water Distribution of food Climate change Climate Change Earth’s average surface temperature Distribution of rainfall Patterns of temperature change and global conveyor belt Factors Affecting Global Climate Change Relationship of Earth to Sun Anthropogenic causes Anthropogenic Causes Atmospheric change due to carbon dioxide emissions, methane emissions, destruction of ozone by providing more surfaces-free radicals for reactions to occur in stratosphere (SOX, NOX, CO2, CH4), changes in vegetative cover, water pollution - eutrophication Average surface temperature (°C) 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 Thousands of years ago 200 100 Average temperature over past 900,000 years Present Fig. 18.2a, p. 447 2 Temperature change (°C) Agriculture established 1 0 -1 -2 End of last ice age -3 Average temperature over past 10,000 years = 15°C (59°F) -4 -5 20,000 10,000 2,000 1,000 Years ago 200 Temperature change over past 22,000 years 100 Now Fig. 18.2b, p. 447 Temperature change (°C) 1.0 0.5 0.0 -0.5 -1.0 1000 1100 1200 1300 1400 1500 1600 1700 Year 1800 1900 2000 2101 Temperature change over past 1,000 years Fig. 18.2c, p. 447 Average surface temperature (°C) 15.0 14.8 14.6 14.4 14.2 14.0 13.8 13.6 1860 1880 1900 1920 1940 Year 1960 1980 Average temperature over past 130 years 2000 2020 Fig. 18.2d, p. 447 How do we know? Recent history-have sufficient data from a variety of sources (hot air balloons, buoys, satellite data, pollen records, coral...) Ancient history- ice cores (Vostock), rocks, tree rings ) Geologic history-, deep ocean sampling(plankton & radioisotopes), rocks(fossils & radioisotopes) Evidence of Global Change How is this information processed? Modeling # factors, depth of data, period of time Global cooling and warming cycles Global cooling, Ice Ages, last about 100,000 years Global warming, interglacial periods, last about 10,000 to 13,000 years Currently, we are living in an interglacial period Climate and global warming Climate is statistics of meteorological conditions, temperature, precipitation, winds, over a long period of time-at least 30 years 0.5C of warming has occurred in last 130 years with the 1980s the warmest during that period Pattern parallels that of fossil fuel use and injection into the atmosphere of gases that can absorb radiation and lead to global warming Greenhouse Effect Molecules of atmospheric gases vibrate and transform the absorbed energy into longer wavelength infrared radiation in the troposphere Convection currents distribute the heat l of greenhouse gases Atmosphere is good absorber of infrared radiation (7.5 mm) CO2 and H2O vapor limit transmission to space at many l Variation of Temperature, pressure, and altitude above Earth’s surface Global Energy Balance for Atmosphere Numbers are %energy from incoming solar radiation Greenhouse Effect Half of solar heat goes into latent heat, absorbed by water changing to water vapor Of 47% of initial solar energy absorbed at Earth’s surface, only 18% lost by radiation The remainder is captured by atmosphere-surface cycling which causes Earth to be 33C warmer than is would be without an atmosphere Tropospheric heating effect Arrhenius !!!!! 1896 Not a guess, data supports Is THEORY in atmospheric science Average Surface Temperature is about 15C (60F) Due to combination of greenhouse and global cooling processes Cooling processes: heat absorbed by evaporation of water, and water vapor stores heat in upper atmosphere (thermosphere) Greenhouse Gas CO2 fossil fuel burning (75%), biomass burning CH4 rice, cows, landfills, coal production, coal seams, natural gas leaks, oil production N2O fossil fuel burning, fertilizers, livestock wastes, nylon prod CFCs air conditioners, refrigerators, foams HCFCs-” “ Halons- fire extinguishers CCl4 cleaning solvent 360 340 320 300 280 Carbon dioxide 260 240 220 +2.5 200 0 180 –2.5 –5.0 Temperature change End of last ice age 160 120 80 40 0 Thousands of years before present –7.5 –10.0 Variation of temperature (˚C) from current level Concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere (ppm) Correlation between CO2 and Temp Change 380 Fig. 18.3, p. 449 Surface Ozone: Top is Preindustrial and Lower frame is current (2002) Changes in atmosphere, geosphere, & biosphere from glacial to interglacial periods Ozone over Antarctica 1979 to 1990 Measurement of Air pollution from satellite Drought from June to August in global climate model Global Ocean Temp at depth of 160 m (vol transport stream) Carbon dioxide Methane Nitrous oxide Index (1900 = 100) 250 Projected emissions 200 150 100 1990 2000 2025 2050 Year 2075 2100 Fig. 18.5, p. 451 Global warming is cyclical; the rate is not The rate of global warming is greater than past interglacial periods The CO2 in troposphere is higher than probably the last 20 million years 75% of CO2 since 1980 is due to fossil fuel burning; remainder is human changes in land use Average global temp has >0.6C mostly since 1946 Since 1861 9 of 10 warmest years have occurred since 1990 with the hottest in 1998 and 2001 Ice caps and glaciers shrinking Global sea level rise of 10-20 cm in 100 years Plants and animals are migrating north to meet optimum temperatures Global Change Affect the availability of water resources by altering rates of evaporation and precipitation Shift areas where crops can be grown Change average sea levels Alter the structure and location of the world’s biomes Positive feedback More product results in more production-eg. “nothing succeeds like success” Greater temp, more melting of snow, loss of albedo effect results in greater temp and still more melting of snow Thawing soil results in more microbial activity; more microbial activity results in more CO2 and more thawing soil Arctic circle, Greenland, and Antarctica all have thinning ice sheets, particularly Greenland The influx of freshwater from melting glaciers on Greenland could stop the global conveyor belt in the Atlantic Global conveyor belt Greenland Cold water melting from Antarctica's ice cap and icebergs falls to the ocean floor and surges northward, affecting worldwide circulation. Antarctica Fig. 18.10, p. 456 Temperature change (°C) from 1980–99 mean 1.2 Observed 1.0 0.8 Model of greenhouse gases + aerosols + solar output 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 -0.2 1860 1880 1900 1920 1940 Year 1960 1980 2000 2010 Fig. 18.7, p. 453 Climate Models and IPCC IPCC: Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 2,000 climate scientists 90-95% chance that earth’s mean surface temp will >1.4-5.8C between 2000 and 2100; change btwn 2000 and 2030 will equal that of entire 20th century Many greenhouse gases show increases due to anthropogenic activities Bush administration 2002 says climate changes anthropogenic and then reject Kyoto Treaty! Climate models are only models & have limitations Building models Transect atmosphere mathematically Assign initial boundary condition for each variable to each cell in layer (solar radiation, precipitation, heat radiated by earth, cloudiness, interactions btwn atmosphere and oceans, greenhouse gases, & air pollutants) Develop equations that connect cells so vary together Run model to simulate changes that can be verified and then run to project future changes Reliability tied to accuracy of data inputs and magnification of errors over time, & chaos 6.0 5.5 5.0 Change in temperature (ºC) 4.5 4.0 3.5 3.0 Measured vs predicted temperature changes 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0 1850 1875 1900 1925 1950 1975 2000 2025 2050 2075 2100 Year Fig. 18.8, p. 453 Change will not be evenly distributed Temp increases higher over land than over oceans Greater in high latitudes near earth’s poles than in lower latitude equatorial regions Much higher in inland regions in the northern latitudes Agriculture • Shifts in food-growing areas • Changes in crop yields • Increased irrigation demands • Increased pests, crop diseases, and weeds in warmer areas Water Resources • Changes in water supply • Decreased water quality • Increased drought • Increased flooding Forests • Changes in forest composition and locations • Disappearance of some forests • Increased fires from drying • Loss of wildlife habitat and species Biodiversity Sea Level and Coastal Areas • Extinction of some plant and animal species • • • Loss of habitats • • Disruption of aquatic life • • • Weather Extremes • Prolonged heat waves and droughts • Increased flooding • More intense hurricanes, typhoons, tornadoes, and violent storms Rising sea levels Flooding of low-lying islands and coastal cities Flooding of coastal estuaries, wetlands, and coral reefs Beach erosion Disruption of coastal fisheries Contamination of coastal aquifiers with salt water Human Health Human Population • Increased deaths • More environmental refugees • Increased migration • Increased deaths from heat and disease • Disruption of food and water supplies • Spread of tropical diseases to temperate areas • Increased respiratory disease • Increased water pollution from coastal flooding Fig. 18.12, p. 458 Ultraviolet light hits a chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) molecule, such as CFCl3, breaking off a chlorine atom and leaving CFCl2. Sun Cl Cl C F Cl UV radiation Once free, the chlorine atom is off to attack another ozone molecule and begin the cycle again. Cl Cl O O The chlorine atom attacks an ozone (O3) molecule, pulling an oxygen atom off it and leaving O O O an oxygen molecule (O2). Cl Summary of Reactions CCl3F + UV Cl + CCl2F Cl + O3 ClO + O2 Repeated Cl + O Cl + O2 many times A free oxygen atom pulls the oxygen atom off the chlorine monoxide Cl molecule to form O2. O O Cl The chlorine atom and the O oxygen atom join O to form a chlorine monoxide molecule O (ClO). Fig. 18.16, p. 466