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Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright

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Title: Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright


1
Environmental Science Toward a Sustainable
Future Richard T. Wright
Chapter 20
  • The Atmosphere Climate, Climate Change, and
    Ozone Depletion PPT by Clark E. Adams

2
El Niño What Happened?
April
May
  • Jet streams shifted from normal course
  • Cause unknown

June
3
The El Niño Effects Fig. 20-1
  • Landslides on the California coast
  • Mildest hurricane season in many years
  • Rain five times normal in an East Africa drought
    region
  • Record crop harvests in India, Australia, and
    Argentina

4
La Niña What Happened?
  • Easterly trade winds reestablished with greater
    intensity
  • Upwelling of colder water from ocean depths
  • Jet streams are weakened
  • Global patterns in moisture and evaporation
    return to normal

5
Atmospheric Structure
6
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7
Weather Solar Energy Balance
Most solar energy absorbed by atmosphere,
oceans, and land
8
Weather Convection Cell
9
Tornadoes
  • Cold low-pressure air mass collides with a warm
    high-pressure air mass

http//www.photolib.noaa.gov/nssl/nssl0065.htm
10
Fujita Scale Measures the Intensity of Tornadoes
  • F-0 4072 mph, chimney damage, tree branches
    broken
  • F-1 73112 mph, mobile homes pushed off
    foundations or overturned
  • F-2 113157 mph, considerable damage, mobile
    homes demolished, trees uprooted

11
Fujita Scale Measures the Intensity of Tornadoes
  • F-3 158205 mph, roofs and walls torn down,
    trains overturned, cars thrown
  • F-4 207260 mph, well-constructed walls leveled
  • F-5 261318 mph, homes lifted off foundation and
    carried considerable distances, autos thrown as
    far as 100 meters

12
Climates in the Past
13
Ocean and Atmosphere
  • Covers 75 of the Earths surface
  • Major source of water to hydrologic cycle
  • Major source of heat to atmosphere
  • Stores and conveys heat

14
The Ocean Conveyor System
15
The Earth as a Greenhouse
16
Factors Affecting Global Temperatures
  • Cloud cover cooling
  • Changes in Suns intensity cooling or warming
  • Volcanic activity cooling
  • Sulfate aerosols cooling

17
Atmospheric CO2 Concentrations
18
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19
Global Surface Temperatures
20
Global Carbon Cycle
21
Impacts of Global Warming
  • Melting of polar ice caps
  • Flooding of coastal areas
  • Massive migrations of people inland

22
Evidences of Climatic Change
  • 17 of the hottest years on record have occurred
    since 1980 (Fig. 20-5)
  • Wide-scale recession of glaciers
  • Sea level rising

Predicted mean global temperature change by 2100
is between 1.5 and 4.5oC
23
Responses to Climate Change
  • Response 1 mitigation reduce CO2 emissions
  • Response 2 adaptation accepting and learning
    to live with the consequences of climate change

24
Framework Convention on Climate Change (FCC)
  • Relied on voluntary approach to reduce CO2
    emissions
  • Developing countries continue toward developed
    nation status using fossil fuels

25
Framework Convention on Climate Change (FCC)
  • To achieve a 7 reduction by 2010 requires a 25
    reduction of present use
  • By 2010 CO2 emissions will have increased by 30

26
Framework Convention on Climate Change (FCC)
  • Bottom line need 60 reduction (144 ppm) in CO2
    emission worldwide NOW to stabilize greenhouse
    gas concentrations at todays levels

27
Depletion of Ozone Layer
  • Radiation and importance of the shield
  • Formation and breakdown of the shield
  • Coming to grips with ozone depletion

28
Good Ozone!
Bad Ozone!
29
Electromagnetic Spectrum
30
Formation of the Ozone Shield
31
Breakdown of Ozone Shield
32
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33
Montreal Protocol
  • 1987 scale back CFC production by 50 by 2000

34
Coming to Grips with Ozone Depletion Montreal
Protocol
  • 1990 amendment to completely phase out
    ozone-destroying chemicals by 2000
  • 1992 amendment to completely phase out
    ozone-destroying chemicals by 1996

Why the rush?
35
Ozone Hole 11 million sq.mi.
36
The Clean Air Act of 1990 Title IV
  • Restricts production, use, emissions, and
    disposal of ozone-depleting chemicals
  • Regulates the servicing of refrigeration and
    air-conditioning units

Protecting Stratospheric Ozone
37
Greenhouse Gases Ozone
Where
Type of Light
Chemicals
Whats the big deal?
Major Law
How do we fix it?
38
End of Chapter 20
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