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Atmosphere and Climate Change

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Title: Atmosphere and Climate Change


1
Atmosphere and Climate Change
2
Climate
  • Weather is the conditions that occur in the
    atmosphere are over a short period of time.
  • Climate is how the atmosphere "behaves" over
    relatively long periods of time.
  • When we talk about climate change, we talk about
    changes in long-term averages of daily weather.

3
Past Climate Change
  • The Earth's climate has changed throughout
    history.
  • From glacial periods (or "ice ages") where ice
    covered significant portions of the Earth to
    interglacial periods where ice retreated to the
    poles or melted entirely - the climate has
    continuously changed.

4
Past Climate Change
  • Scientists have been able to piece together a
    picture of the Earth's climate dating back
    decades to millions of years ago by analyzing a
    number of substitute, or "proxy," measures of
    climate.

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Past Climate Change
  • Examples of proxy measures include
  • ice cores
  • boreholes
  • tree rings
  • glacier lengths
  • pollen remains
  • ocean sediments
  • studying changes in the Earth's orbit around the
    sun.

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Past Climate Change
  • Causes of Change Prior to the Industrial Era
    (pre-1780)
  • Changes in the Earth's orbit
  • Changes in the sun's intensity
  • Volcanic eruptions
  • Changes in ocean currents

9
Past Climate Change
  • The Last 2,000 Years
  • During the last 2,000 years, the climate has been
    relatively stable.
  • Scientists have identified three departures from
    this stability, known as the Medieval Warm
    Period, the Little Ice Age and the Industrial Era

10
Past Climate Change
  • Prior to the Industrial Era,  the Medieval Warm
    Period and Little Ice Age had defined the upper
    and lower boundaries of the climate's recent
    natural variability and are a reflection of
    changes in climate drivers (the sun's variability
    and volcanic activity) and the climate's internal
    variability (referring to random changes in the
    circulation of the atmosphere and oceans).

11
Recent Climate Change
  • Since the Industrial Revolution (around 1750),
    human activities have substantially added to the
    amount of heat-trapping greenhouse gases in the
    atmosphere.
  • The burning of fossil fuels and biomass (living
    matter such as vegetation) has also resulted in
    emissions of aerosols that absorb and emit heat,
    and reflect light.

12
Factors That Determine Climate
  • Elevation or Altitude
  • Prevailing global wind patterns
  • Latitude and angles of the suns rays
  • Topography
  • Distance from the equator
  • Ocean circulation patterns
  • Volcanic activity

13
The Ozone Layer
  • "The ozone layer" refers to the ozone within
    stratosphere, where over 90 of the earth's ozone
    resides.

14
The Ozone Layer
  • The ozone layer absorbs a portion of the
    radiation from the sun, preventing it from
    reaching the planet's surface.
  • Most importantly, it absorbs the portion of
    ultraviolet light called UVB.
  • UVB has been linked to many harmful effects,
    including various types of skin cancer,
    cataracts, and harm to some crops, certain
    materials, and some forms of marine life.

15
The Ozone Layer
  • The ozone layer absorbs 97-99 of the sun's high
    frequency ultraviolet light , light which is
    potentially damaging to life on earth.
  • Every 1 decrease in the earths ozone shield is
    projected to increases the amount of UV light
    exposure to the lower atmosphere by 2.

16
Chemicals That Cause Ozone Depletion
  • Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)
  • used as refrigerants, solvents, foam blowing
    agents, fire extinguishing agents
  • CFCs have atmospheric lifetimes long enough to
    allow them to be transported by winds into the
    stratosphere.
  • Because they release chlorine or bromine when
    they break down, they damage the protective ozone
    layer.

17
The Ozone Hole
  • CFCs, HCFCs, carbon tetrachloride, methyl
    chloroform, and other gases release chlorine
    atoms, and halons and methyl bromide release
    bromine atoms
  • It is these atoms that actually destroy ozone.
  • It is estimated that one chlorine atom can
    destroy over 100,000 ozone molecules before it is
    removed from the stratosphere.

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Protecting the Ozone Layer
  • Montreal Protocol on Substances That Deplete the
    Ozone Layer
  • International treaty designed to protect the
    ozone layer by phasing out the production of a
    number of substances believed to be responsible
    for ozone depletion.
  • Since the Montreal Protocol came into effect, the
    atmospheric concentrations of the most important
    chlorofluorocarbons and related chlorinated
    hydrocarbons have either leveled off or decreased

20
Global Warming
  • Global warming is the increase in the average
    temperature of Earth's near-surface air and
    oceans since the mid-20th century and its
    projected continuation.

21
The Greenhouse Effect
  • Energy from the Sun drives the Earth's weather
    and climate.
  • The Earth absorbs energy from the Sun, and also
    radiates energy back into space.
  • However, much of this energy going back to space
    is absorbed by greenhouse gases in the
    atmosphere

22
The Greenhouse Effect
  • Because the atmosphere then radiates most of this
    energy back to the Earths surface, our planet is
    warmer than it would be if the atmosphere did not
    contain these gases.
  • Without this natural "greenhouse effect,"
    temperatures would be about 60ºF lower than they
    are now, and life as we know it today would not
    be possible.

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Greenhouse Gases
  • Carbon dioxide
  • Water vapor
  • Methane
  • Nitrous oxide
  • Fluorinated gases
  • Hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons, and sulfur
    hexafluoride

25
Carbon Dioxide
  • Carbon dioxide enters the atmosphere through the
    burning of fossil fuels (oil, natural gas, and
    coal), solid waste, trees and wood products, and
    also as a result of other chemical reactions
    (e.g., manufacture of cement).
  • Carbon dioxide is also removed from the
    atmosphere (or sequestered) when it is absorbed
    by plants as part of the biological carbon cycle.

26
Carbon Dioxide (non-energy related) Emissions
  • Cement manufacture
  • calcium carbonate is heated to produce lime
  • In 1998, the United States manufactured an
    estimated 85.5 million metric tons of cement,
    resulting in the direct release of carbon dioxide
    containing about 10.6 million metric tons of
    carbon into the atmosphere.

27
Measuring Carbon Dioxide
  • The rise of carbon dioxide gas in our atmosphere
    has been measured continuously since 1958.

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Methane Emissions
  • Sources include energy production and consumption
    such as
  • coal mining
  • natural gas systems
  • Waste management
  • landfill gas
  • Agriculture
  • manure management
  • cattle (enteric fermentation)
  • rice cultivation

32
Nitrous Oxide (N2O) Emissions
  • Agricultural soil management
  • nitrogen fertilization
  • Mobile sources
  • Acidic acid production
  • used to make nylon

33
Expected Consequences of GHG Concentration
Increases
  • Temperature Global temperatures are rising.
  • Observations collected over the last century
    suggest that the average land surface temperature
    has risen 0.45-0.6C (0.8-1.0F) in the last
    century.

34
Expected Consequences of GHG Concentration
Increases
  • Rising Sea Level
  • Hotter temperatures mean ice -- glaciers, sea ice
    and polar ice sheets -- is melting, increasing
    the amount of water in the world's seas and
    oceans.

35
Expected Consequences of GHG Concentration
Increases
  • Shrinking Glaciers
  • In the span of a century, glaciers in Montana's
    Glacier National Park have deteriorated from 150
    to just 35.
  • And the Himalayan glaciers that feed the Ganges
    River, which supplies drinking and irrigation
    water to 500 million people, are reportedly
    shrinking by 40 yards (37 meters) each year.

36
Montana's Glacier National Park
37
Expected Consequences of GHG Concentration
Increases
  • Heat Waves
  • Extreme heat waves are happening two to four
    times more often now, steadily rising over the
    last 50 to 100 years, and are projected to be 100
    times more likely over the next 40 years.

38
Expected Consequences of GHG Concentration
Increases
  • Storms and Floods
  • Warm waters give hurricanes their strength, and
    scientists are correlating the increase in ocean
    and atmospheric temperatures to the rate of
    violent storms.

39
Expected Consequences of GHG Concentration
Increases
  • Drought
  • As the climate warms, experts estimate drought
    conditions may increase by at least 66 percent
    source Scientific American.
  • An increase in drought conditions leads quickly
    to a shrinking water supply and a decrease in
    quality agricultural conditions.

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Expected Consequences of GHG Concentration
Increases
  • Disease
  • Warmer temperatures along with associated floods
    and droughts are encouraging worldwide health
    threats by creating an environment where
    mosquitoes, ticks, mice and other
    disease-carrying creatures thrive.

42
Expected Consequences of GHG Concentration
Increases
  • Economic Consequences
  • Consumers face rising food and energy costs along
    with increased insurance premiums for health and
    home.
  • Governments suffer the consequences of diminished
    tourism and industrial profits, soaring energy,
    food and water demands, disaster cleanup and
    border tensions.

43
Expected Consequences of GHG Concentration
Increases
  • Loss of Biodiversity
  • As many as 30 percent of plant and animal species
    alive today risk extinction by 2050 if average
    temperatures rise more than 2 to 11.5 degrees F
    (1.1 to 6.4 degrees C) sources EPA, Scientific
    American.
  • Such extinctions will be due to loss of habitat
    through desertification, deforestation and ocean
    warming, as well as the inability to adapt to
    climate warming.

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Expected Consequences of GHG Concentration
Increases
  • Destruction of Ecosystems
  • Changing climatic conditions and dramatic
    increases in carbon dioxide will put our
    ecosystems to the test, threatening supplies of
    fresh water, clean air, fuel and energy
    resources, food, medicine and other matters we
    depend upon not just for our lifestyles but for
    our survival.

46
Coral Bleaching
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