Title: Global Climate Change
1Global Climate Change
- Environmental ImpactsA Review and Reflection
2 - What should we worry about the most?
3What should we tell our students?
- Most important?
- Most personally relevant?
- Most dramatic?
4Weve seen the data
5Modern CO2 Measurements
6Weve seen the data
7is the increased greenhouse effect I'd bet the
mortgage it Mark Serreze, NSIDC
- ARCTIC SEA ICE EXTENT - SEPTEMBER TREND,
1978-2005 -
The area covered by sea ice
8We have relevant stories for our students
- MSNBC.com
- Its official January was warmest on record
U.S. forecasters say it was 8.5 degrees warmer
than normal - The Associated Press
- Updated 438 p.m. ET Feb. 7, 2006
-
- WASHINGTON - January was a fair-weather friend.
- Recording the warmest January on record allowed
Americans to save on their heating bills. But
like all good things, last months mildness seems
to have been too good to last. - The countrys average temperature for the month
was 39.5 degrees Fahrenheit, 8.5 degrees above
average for January, the National Climatic Data
Center said Tuesday. The old record for January
warmth was 37.3 degrees set in 1953.
9We have relevant stories for our students
- Global Warming Lending Strength to
HurricanesWarmer waters fueling more
powerful storms WASHINGTON, September 2, 2005
Because rising global temperatures have warmed
the oceans, and warm oceans fuel hurricanes, many
people have asked whether hurricane Katrina is
connected to global warming. UCS
10We have Early Warning Signs
11Changes in Flowering Date
12Mismatch of Bird Nesting Food Availability
13Lets think outside our immediate realm of human
experience
14 15What about the oceans?
16Evolutionary Perspective
- The living history of our planet spans 3.5
billion years. - Life arose in our oceans about 3.5 bya
- For the first 3 billion years, life was solely
aquatic
17Evolutionary Perspective
- Photosynthesis was invented in the oceans (by
cyanobacteria) - Photosynthesis produces oxygen gas (by splitting
water molecules) - ? O2 makes complex life possible
- ? O3 makes terrestrial life possible
18Even Today
- Ocean life accounts for over 90 of planets
photosynthetic activity.
19Oceans
- Represent the cradle of life
- What are the consequences of messing with your
mother?
20Oceans are warming
- Effect on coast-line?
- (Aside DDN articles)
21How many gallons of water in the ocean?
1966 2006
Area of Pacific ocean (sq mi) 63,800,000 64,186,000
Ave. depth of Pacific ocean (ft) 14,050 14,049
of Earth surface covered by water 71 71
Gallons of H20 in oceans 361 quintillion(3.61 x 10 20)
SourceFacts Figures SourceUS Navy
22Reference for volume of ocean
- http//pao.cnmoc.navy.mil/educate/neptune/trivia/e
arth.htm
23Lethal Effects ofClimate Change-Coral Bleaching
24 25Global Warning / Coral Reefs
- Color Blindness
- By Susan McGrath
- The brilliant beauty of coral reefs has begun
to disappear before our eyes, along with the
incredible variety of marine life that surrounds
them. It has taken only a slight increase in
sea-surface temperatures to unravel one of the
earths most ancient ecosystems. - SSTs rise just two degrees Fahrenheit above
normal summer high temperatures for a period of
just two weeks - http//magazine.audubon.org/features0312/color_bli
ndness.html
26Temperature increase in Ocean
- Not discrete isolated event
- Coastline
- Weather/climate patterns effects
- Marine, ultimately terrestrial ecosystems effects
27Peak Oil
- Economic crisis?
- Ecologic Opportunity?