Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Global Climate Change Samayaluca Dune Field, south of Juarez, Chihuahua Climate vs. Weather NMSU Rainfall 10 9 Cumulative Rainfall (Inches) 8 7 6 2006 2005 2004 2003 5 4 3 2 1 0 -1 1 20 39 58 77 96 115 134 153 172 191 210 229 248 267 286 305 324 343 362 Days since Jan 1 120 100 # Days 80 over 100 over 95 over 90 60 40 20 0 2006 2005 2004 2003 Average 120 Days since Jan 1 100 80 Temp 2006 2005 2004 2003 60 40 20 0 1 20 39 58 77 96 115 134 153 172 191 210 229 248 267 286 305 324 343 362 Max Temp. (°F) Days since Jan 1 Climate System: 5 parts • • • • • Atmosphere Ocean Cryosphere (ice) Lithosphere Sun and internal earth heating Climate System • Atmosphere – – – – – Nitrogen N2 78% Oxygen O2 21% Argon Ar 0.93% Carbon dioxide CO2 0.035% Other minor gases 0.035% Ocean influences climate Transfers of heat from tropics to polar regions (i.e., Gulf Stream) Cryosphere: ICE • Melting ice increases ocean volume • Sea level was 130 m (425 feet) lower during last ice age (18,000 years ago) • Ice reflects solar energy: albedo What is albedo? • Reflectance of land surface • Earth reflects about 31% of solar energy Lithosphere • Mountains influence weather • Arrangement of continents affects ocean currrents • Volcanism affects composition of atmosphere Heat flowing out of Earth’s deep interior is only 0.06 W/m2. Solar energy input to Earth’s surface is 342 W/m2. Greenhouse Gases • CO2, H20 and methane (CH4): • Absorb and re-radiate radiation • Insulates and raises Earth temperature Earth Temperature Normal: 14o C (57o F) Without greenhouse gases: -19o C (-2o F) Feedback enhances warming • Positive Feedback: – Amplifies changes in the system. – Temperature increase decreases Earth’s albedo by reducing snow and ice cover Climate Change Understanding Natural Climate Variability: Use the geologic record to understand Earth Climate in the past (Uniformitarianism) Long-term change can be assessed from ice cores, which record annual cycles of ice formation from snow. * Cycles can be counted back like tree rings to create a long term record. * Ice layers trap atmospheric gas, contain isotopic record of temperature change. Milankovitch cycles Related to variations in: 1. Eccentricity 2. Tilt of axis 3. Precession (wobble) High eccentricity increases contrast between summer and winter. Earth’s tilt axis changes over time Precession 1941 2004 Columbia glacier Greenland Greenland What causes sea level rise? Melting ice Hotter oceans are larger volume Sea Level Rise Barrier Islands Sea-Level Rise 1 meter rise 2 meter rise 4 meter rise 8 meter rise The influence of Carbon on climate change ATMOSPHERE Fossilfuel burning (5.3 Gt/yr) Land-use change: deforestation, agriculture (1.7 Gt/yr) Land uptake By new plant growth (1.9 Gt/yr) Terrestrial biosphere LAND Cement production (0.1 Gt/yr) Fossil Rock organic carbonates carbon GEOLOGIC RESERVOIRS Ocean uptake by air-sea gas exchange (1.9 Gt/yr) OCEAN 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,… ATMOSPHERE Fossilfuel burning (5.3 Gt/yr) Land-use change: deforestation, agriculture (1.7 Gt/yr) Land uptake By new plant growth (1.9 Gt/yr) Terrestrial biosphere LAND Cement production (0.1 Gt/yr) Fossil Rock organic carbonates carbon GEOLOGIC RESERVOIRS Ocean uptake by air-sea gas exchange (1.9 Gt/yr) OCEAN …yielding a net atmospheric increase of 3.3 Gt/yr. Climate has been relatively warm and stable during the last 10,000 years. High Key: Temperature CO2 Methane Thousands of years before present Relative carbon dioxide and methane concentrations Temperature relative to present climate (°C) There is a decline in both temperature and greenhouse gas concentrations during glacial periods… …and a rapid rise during deglaciation. Low East Antarctic ice core data Interglacial epoch Glacial epoch Is Human-induced climate change possible? CO2 concentration (ppm) Northern Hemisphere temperature anomaly (°C) The 20th-century is clearly anomalous when compared with the last millennium. Temperature CO2 concentration Years Temperature CO2 concentration Years CO2 concentration (ppm) Global temperature anomaly (°C) A recent warming trend correlates with the increase in CO2. Atmospheric CO2 Projections Under 3 Alternate Scenarios…. 2000 2020 2040 2060 Year 2080 2100 ….and Estimated Average Surface Temperatures for Those Scenarios Uncertainty envelope due to lack of knowledge of climate system Global Warming Evidence Global Warming Evidence Is Global Warming Real? • 20 years of data: Is Global Warming Real? • 130 years of data: Why is Global Warming ignored? • Not enough evidence? • Better things to spend money on? • Cutting emissions will hurt the economy • The EFECTS of climate change might be distant and uncertain • The COSTS of curbing greenhouse gases are immediate and substantial! Global Warming • Small steps can reduce carbon emissions • These are affordable and multiplied by 100,000,000s of people can be significant • • • • • • CO2 is a small part of the atmosphere Small increases have huge effects Greenhouse gases keep earth hot Natural changes in climate occur Recent changes correlate to human activity Changes in lifestyle can avoid catastrophe Keeling Curve