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Anthropogenic Climatic Attentuation Global Warming

Complete the evidence for climate change

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Page 1: Complete the evidence for climate change

Anthropogenic Climatic Attentuation

Global Warming

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A. The evidence of past climates

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Paleo-environmental reconstruction

• Step #1 – find your evidence• Step #2 – date your evidence• Step #3 – examine you evidence

• All spread over a bed of nice…..• UNIFORMITARIANISM

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What is Paleoclimatology?

• Scientists take samples from the centre of the coral. Clipperton Atoll, • Paleoclimatology is the study of past climates. Since it is not possible

to go back in time to see what climates were like, scientists use imprints created during past climate, known as proxies, to interpret paleoclimate. Microbial life, such as diatoms, forams, and coral serve as useful climate proxies. Other proxies include ice cores, tree rings, and sediment cores (which include diatoms, foraminifera, microbiota, pollen, and charcoal within the sediment and the sediment itself).

• Past climate can be reconstructed using a combination of different types of proxy records. These records can then be integrated with observations of Earth's modern climate and placed into a computer model to infer past as well as predict future climate.

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Step #1 – find your evidence• How Are Microbes Used As Proxies?• Foraminifera, such as this Globigerinoides species, can be used as a climate proxy (copyright O. R. Anderson,

accessed from the Micro Scope website).• Foraminifera, also known as forams, and diatoms are commonly used microbial climate proxies. Forams and

diatoms are shelled microorganisms found in aquatic and marine environments. There are both planktonic, or floating in the water column, and benthic, or bottom dwelling, forms. Foram shells are made up of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) while diatom shells are composed of silicon dioxide (SiO2). These organisms record evidence for past environmental conditions in their shells. Remains of foram and diatom shells can be found by taking sediment cores from lakes and oceans, since their shells get buried and preserved in sediment as they die. The chemical make up of these shells reflect water chemistry at the time of shell formation. Stable oxygen isotope ratios contained in the shell can be used to infer past water temperatures. These oxygen isotopes are found naturally in both the atmosphere and dissolved in water. Warmer water tends to evaporate off more of the lighter isotopes, so shells grown in warmer waters will be enriched in the heavier isotope. Measurements of stable isotopes of planktonic and benthic foram and diatom shells have been taken from hundreds of deep-sea cores around the world to map past surface and bottom water temperatures.

• Researchers may also use foram and diatom population dynamics to infer past climate. Relative abundance as well as species composition in particular areas may indicate environmental conditions. Typically, warmer weather will cause organisms to proliferate. In addition, since each species has a particular set of ideal growing conditions, species composition at a particular site at a particular time may indicate past environmental conditions.

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• How Are Other Proxies Used?• Combinations of proxy data are generally used to reconstruct records for past

climate. In addition to forams and diatoms, common proxies and their respective analytical methods include:

Ice core records- deep ice cores, such as those from Lake Vostok, Antarctica, the Greenland Ice Sheet Project, and North Greenland Ice Sheet Project can be analyzed for trapped gas, stable isotope ratios, and pollen trapped within the layers to infer past climate.

Tree rings- can be counted to determine age. The thickness of each ring can be used to infer fluctuations in temperature and precipitation, since optimal conditions for the particular species will result in more growth, and thus thicker rings for a given year. Scars and burn marks can indicate past natural events such as fire.

Sediment cores- can be analyzed in many ways. Sediment laminations, or layers, can indicate sedimentation rate through time. Charcoal trapped in sediments can indicate past fire events. Remains of microorganisms such as diatoms, foraminifera, microbiota, and pollen within sediment can indicate changes in past climate, since each species has a limited range of habitable conditions. When these organisms and pollen sink to the bottom of a lake or ocean, they can become buried within the sediment. Thus, climate change can be inferred by species composition within the sediment

Step #1 – find your evidence

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B. What are the causes of climate change?

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The Greenhouse Effect

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Human activity increases concentration of GH gases, resulting in global warming

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The Greenhouse Effect & Global Warming

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Human activity increases concentration of GH gases, resulting in global warming

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• The Serbian astrophysicist Milutin Milankovitch is best known for developing one of the most significant theories relating Earth motions and long-term climate change.

• Milankovitch dedicated his career to developing a mathematical theory of climate based on the seasonal and latitudinal variations of solar radiation received by the Earth.

• Now known as the Milankovitch Theory, it states that as the Earth travels through space around the sun, cyclical variations in three elements of Earth-sun geometry combine to produce variations in the amount of solar energy that reaches Earth: – Variations in the Earth's orbital eccentricity—the shape of the orbit

around the sun. – Changes in obliquity—changes in the angle that Earth's axis makes

with the plane of Earth's orbit. – Precession—the change in the direction of the Earth's axis of

rotation, i.e., the axis of rotation behaves like the spin axis of a top that is winding down; hence it traces a circle on the celestial sphere over a period of time.

• Together, the periods of these orbital motions have become known as Milankovitch cycles.

The Causes1. Earth-Sun Geometry

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The Causes1. Earth-Sun Geometry

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2. Volcanic eruptions

Scientists are quite certain that over a period of several million years, increased volcanism can create enough dust and soot to block out sunlight and produce climatic change.

For instance at the end of the Cretaceous period and beginning of the Tertiary (known as the KT boundary) there was increased volcanic activity, with huge volcanic eruptions spewing forth floods of lava. The Deccan traps in India are an example of K-T boundary ruptures in the Earth's surface, which may have lead to the extinction of dinosaurs.

512,000 cubic km = the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens produced 1 cubic km of volcanic material. 60-65 Myr BP

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• Example: • Mt Pinatubo June 15, 1991, 20 million tons

of SO2 and ash particles 12 miles (20 km) high into the atmosphere.

• In the stratosphere circled the globe for three weeks.

2. Volcanic eruptions

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2. Volcanic eruptions• Large-scale volcanic activity may last only a few days, but the massive

outpouring of gases and ash can influence climate patterns for years. Sulfuric gases convert to sulfate aerosols, sub-micron droplets containing about 75 percent sulfuric acid. Following eruptions, these aerosol particles can linger as long as three to four years in the stratosphere.

Major eruptions alter the Earth's radiative balance because volcanic aerosol clouds absorb terrestrial radiation, and scatter a significant amount of the incoming solar radiation, an effect known as "radiative forcing" that can last from two to three years following a volcanic eruption. "Volcanic eruptions cause short-term climate changes and contribute to natural climate variability," says Georgiy Stenchikov, a research professor with the Department of Environmental Sciences at Rutgers University. "Exploring effects of volcanic eruption allows us to better understand important physical mechanisms in the climate system that are initiated by volcanic forcing."

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3. Solar output

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Relative to 1961-1990 average

Relative to 1961-1990 average

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BC

Who is to blame?B

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Emissions v Population (%)

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Wealth v Pop:Gas ratio

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