Title: Earth, Moon and Mars: How They Work
1Earth, Moon and Mars How They Work
Professor Michael Wysession Department of Earth
and Planetary Sciences Washington University, St.
Louis, MO Lecture 8 Human Impacts
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4 Global Carbon Dioxide Cycle
Barrow, AK CO2
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6Global Methane
Barrow, AK Permafrost Melting?
7Nitrous Oxide (N2O), a Powerful Greenhouse Gas,
is Produced by Combustion and Agricultural
Practices
Nitrous oxide is the third strongest greenhouse
gas. Although it presently is in relatively low
concentrations in the atmosphere, concentrations
are steadily increasing. The north-to-south
gradient between the NOAA observatory
measurements at Barrow, Alaska (representative
of northern hemisphere sources) and the South
Pole, are evident in the graph. Nitrous oxide is
also a major source of stratospheric nitric
oxide, a compound that helps to catalytically
destroy stratospheric ozone.
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25More tornadoes in 2008 than in any year of the
past half-century.
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30 Projected Temperatures, 2080-2090
(Base years 1980-1990)
31 Projected Precipitation, 2080-209 9
(Base years
1980-1990)
32 Wheat will not Grow on Rock and in Lakes.
Canadian Shield
Sierra Magazine, March/April 2007, pg. 11, on
warming climate moving wheat growing north. The
article neglected the Canadian Shield of rock and
water.
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36Areal Extent of Arctic Sea Ice
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38- The Four Critical Responses to Atmospheric
Warming (by 2100) - Rapid change in ice sheets and hence sea level
Occurring, IPCC probably underestimated - (2) Widespread changes in precipitation
Probable - (3) Abrupt change in the Atlantic conveyer belt
(Gulfstream water to the Arctic) Improbable - (4) Rapid release of methane trapped in
permafrost Probable, but not catastrophic
climate tipping
39Permafrost
40Permafrost Melting, Tana Flats, Alaska Tundra
(1978) to Wetlands
(1998)
41Permafrost Temperatures East Teshekpuk Well
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44United States at night.
US paved land is now the size of state of
Georgia. US developed land is now the size of the
state of California.
45Water Pollution
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47Ground can clean out pollutants, given enough
time.
48Different types of groundwater pollution
49The Lord can make you tumble, The Lord can make
you turn, The Lord can make you rock and roll,
But the Lord cant make you burn. Burn on, big
river, burn on. (Randy Newman, Burn on, Big
River)
Cuyahoga River fires 1952, 1969
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51About 2 billion tons of U.S. soil are eroded
every year.
52U.S. Municipal Waste and Recycling
Year 1991 2001 U.S. Population 249,439,5
45 286,345,000 Municipal Waste Generated
(tons) 293,613,000 409,029,000 Percentage
Recycled 11.5 32 Tons Disposed 259,847,0
00 278,139,720 Tons Disposed Per Person 1.041
0.979
53WASTE IMPORTERS, 2000 ( TONS) 1.Pennsylvania
9,764,000 2. Virginia 3,891,000 3. Michigan
3,124,000 4. Illinois 1,548,000 5.
Indiana 1,531,000 WASTE EXPORTERS,
2000 ( TONS) 1.New York 5,600,000 2.New
Jersey 1,800,000 3. Missouri 1 ,793,000 4.
Maryland 1,547,000 5.Massachusetts 1,218,000
54INTERNATIONAL WASTE TRADE (2001) Waste Imported
into the U.S. 30,567,000 tons Waste Exported
out of the U.S. -18,255,030 tons Net Import of
Waste Into the U.S. 12,311,970 tons
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4.5 pounds of garbage per person per day.
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59(Municipal Solid Waste)
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63Percentages of biomes impacted by human activity.
64End of the CENOZOIC ERA! Start of the
ANTHROPOCENE!
65At noon today 6,666,250,300
http//www.census.gov/cgi-bin/ipc/popclockw
http//www.ibiblio.org/lunarbin/worldpop
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69Density of the human population 1994
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72Source United Nations, World Population
Prospects, The 1998 Revision and estimates by
the Population Reference Bureau.
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