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Weather, Climate & Society ATMO 336 Natural Climate Variability Perspective: Time Scales 4.6 b.y. 2.1 b.y. 13.7 b.y. 3.5 b.y. 65 m.y. 21 s Avg. human life span=0.15 s http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/Earth--Atmospheric--and-Planetary-Sciences/12-301Fall-2006/LectureNotes/index.htm Perspective: Astronomic Distance Scales 13.7 Ga (+/- 1%) 1 lt.y.=1016 m http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/Earth--Atmospheric--and-Planetary-Sciences/12-301Fall-2006/LectureNotes/index.htm http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth What is Climate Change? • Climate change - A significant shift in the mean state and event frequency of the atmosphere. • Climate change is a normal component of the Earth’s natural variability. • Climate change occurs on all time and space scales. • It was stated that “a plethora of evidence exists that indicates the climate of the Earth has changed.” What is that evidence? How do we know what we know? Determining the Past Climate Paleoclimatology - the study of past climates. • Past 100-200 years (weather observations) • Must use indirect climate measures, proxies, to examine further into the past. Some proxies: - Tree rings (1,000+ years before present BP) - Trapped pollen (10,000+ years BP) - Glacial ice cores (100,000+ years BP) - Ocean sediment cores (1 Million+ years BP) - Geology (1 Billion+ years BP) Detecting Change With Proxies Scientifically, the best way to detect change is to directly measure it. Unfortunately for the timescales of interest in climate science, we were not always able (interested in?) to measure quantities such as temperature, precipitation, wind speed, direction, greenhouse gas levels, etc. But, obviously we want to know what these properties were and how they changed in the past to test our understanding of how climate changes. The study of past climate is known as paleoclimate science. Courtesy J. Thornton, U Wash Unlocking “Stored” Climate Change • Modern Instrument Record • Tree Rings • Ice Cores • Sediment cores • Rock formations/types Record: 1000 ~ Present day “Length” of growing season Good versus stressed years Major fires Courtesy J. Thornton, U Wash Unlocking “Stored” Climate Change • Modern Instrument Record • Tree Rings • Ice Cores • Sediment cores • Rock formations/types Record: ~ 1Mya to ~ 20th cen Inert gases (CO2, CH4, N2O,…) Particulates (soot, ash, etc) Temperature?? Courtesy J. Thornton, U Wash Unlocking “Stored” Climate Change • Modern Instrument Record • Tree Rings • Ice Cores • Sediment cores • Rock formations/types Courtesy J. Thornton, U Wash Record: ~ 200 Mya Microfossils (ocean T), Volcanic glass Organic detritus Magnetic pole location Unlocking “Stored” Climate Change • Modern Instrument Record • Tree Rings • Ice Cores • Sediment Cores • Rock formations/types Banded Iron Formations BIFs tied up oceanic O2 Prevented atmospheric O2 Date no later than ~2 GYA Record: ~ 4.5 Gya Geologic formation Geochemical analysis Magnetic pole Continental Location Fossil record Detecting Change With Proxies Another property/qty that is a function of property of interest. Think approximate The measured property is a PROXY for the one of interest. Courtesy J. Thornton, U Wash Water Cycle – Water Isotope T Proxy 18O/16O 18O/16O 18O/16O lower 18O/16O lower still low high Courtesy J. Thornton, U Wash Vostok Ice Core Record Last Ice Age During last ice age (18,000 years ago) Temps 6oC colder CO2 levels 30% lower CH4 levels 50% lower (Sea level was higher) than pre-industrial interglacial values T based on water isotope proxy Courtesy J. Thornton, U Wash O18 analysis of ocean sediments can be used to construct past temperatures Cold Warm http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%CE%9418O 600 Million Years of Climate The past climate of the Earth can be deduced “by mapping the distribution of ancient coals, desert deposits, tropical soils, salt deposits, glacial material, as well as the distribution of plants and animals that are sensitive to climate, such as alligators, palm trees & mangrove swamps.” 1.8 Mya 65 Mya 145 Mya 200 Mya 251 Mya 299 Mya 359 Mya 417 Mya 444 Mya 490 Mya 542 Mya http://www.scotese.com/climate.htm 540 Mya of Climate Change from O18 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxygen_isotope_ratio_cycle Snowball Earth! http://www.snowballearth.org/images/geologic_column.gif Snowball Earth: Some Evidence dropstones http://www-eps.harvard.edu/people/faculty/hoffman/Snowball-fig11.jpg http://nai.nasa.gov/newsletter/03182005/snowball.jpg Basic physics are understood: Runaway ice-albedo feedback How does earth thaw? CO2? Simple climate models exhibit hysteresis between ice-no ice states Delayed response between CO2 forcing and rapid jumps between ice free and snowball earth. http://www.snowballearth.org/slides/Ch7-6.gif Snowball cycles show freeze-thaw-hothouse http://www.snowballearth.org/images/snwbltvst.gif Is snowball earth a mechanism for jump starting evolutionary leaps? Metazoa and plants appear after last episode http://www.snowballearth.org/slides/Ch7-6.gif Life is responsible for the “recent” rise of oxygen Cambrian explosion Multicell organisms Use of oxygen for metabolism. Water and CO2 are byproducts. Use of sunlight for metabolism. Oxygen is a byproduct. http://si.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E0%B6%BB%E0%B7%96%E0%B6%B4%E0%B6%BA:Oxygen_atmosphere.png Atmospheric constituents have changed radically through the ages http://www.ozh2o.com/atmos.jpg Long-Term Climate Change NA E-A SA Af 180 M BP India Aus Ant NA E-A Af India SA Today Aus Ant Ahrens, Fig 13.6 250 million years ago, the world’s landmasses were joined together and formed a super continent termed Pangea. As today’s continents drifted apart, they moved into different latitude bands. This altered prevailing winds and ocean currents. Long-Term Climate Change • Circumpolar seaway leads to large latitudinal temperature gradient. Current S.H. Situation • Circumequatorial seaway leads to small latitudinal temperature gradient. Situation 50 MYa http://www.ace.mmu.ac.uk/eae/Climate_Change/Older/Continental_Drift.html Long-Term Climate Change • Circumpolar ocean current formed around Antarctica 40-55 MY ago once Antarctica and Australia separated. • This prevented warm air from warmer latitudes to penetrate into Antarctica. • Absence of warm air accelerated growth of the Antarctic ice sheet. http://www.ace.mmu.ac.uk/eae/Climate_Change/Older/Continental_Drift.html Most Recent Ice Age Aguado and Burt, Fig 16-4 Extend of continental glaciers 18,000 years BP. Sea level was 100-125 m lower than present. Bering land bridge between Siberia and Alaska. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Recent_Sea_Level_Rise.png http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Study/BorealMigration/Images/pleistocene_modern.jpg SST 18,000 years BP 18,000 BP Ahrens, Fig 13.2 Much cooler over the North Atlantic Ocean. Ocean currents were undoubtedly different. North Atlantic Drift was probably much weaker. Today Temperatures since the last Ice Age… the time that humans have flourished Glacial advance Glacial retreat Apline advance Rapid melt Ahrens, Fig 13.3 Rapid warming occurred at end of Younger-Dryas period. Ice cores indicate that Ice Age conditions ended in 3 years! Climate affects human societies Viking colonization in Greenland Viking settlements lost in Greenland Ahrens, Fig 13.4 Temperatures for Europe during the last 1200 years. Evidence of Climate Change 0.6oC warming past century Ahrens, Fig 13.5 Surface temperatures based on meteorological observations. Is the warming of the past century due to human activities? Controversial “Hockey Stick” Key Points: Climate Change • Proxy data are used to infer the past climate. • Data show that the Earth’s Climate Has changed in the past Is changing now And will continue to change • Key question is determining whether recent changes are due to natural causes or man. Key Points: Climate Change • The climate system is very complex. Contains hundreds of feedback mechanisms Feedbacks are not completely understood. • Three general climate change mechanisms: Astronomical Atmospheric composition Earth’s surface