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Thursday Nov 4 th SIT WITH YOUR GROUP TODAY! Wrap up of Topic #13 Natural Climatic Forcing (Volcanoes) then Introduction to TOPIC #14 GLOBAL WARMING & ANTHROPOGENIC FORCING ANNOUNCEMENT : The due date for RQ-7 is NEXT TUESDAY, Nov 9 th It will be posted tomorrow. Don’t FORGET!!! NOTE: your last 3 RQ’s will all be due on TUESDAYS instead of Thursdays

Thursday Nov 4 th

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Thursday Nov 4 th SIT WITH YOUR GROUP TODAY! Wrap up of Topic #13 Natural Climatic Forcing (Volcanoes) then Introduction to TOPIC #14 GLOBAL WARMING & ANTHROPOGENIC FORCING. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Thursday Nov 4 th

Thursday Nov 4th

SIT WITH YOUR GROUP TODAY! Wrap up of Topic #13 Natural Climatic

Forcing (Volcanoes) then Introduction to

TOPIC #14 GLOBAL WARMING & ANTHROPOGENIC FORCING

ANNOUNCEMENT: The due date for RQ-7 is NEXT TUESDAY, Nov

9th

It will be posted tomorrow. Don’t FORGET!!!NOTE: your last 3 RQ’s will all be due on TUESDAYS

instead of Thursdays

Page 2: Thursday Nov 4 th

Where are we now ?

Page 3: Thursday Nov 4 th

SEMESTER WRAP-UP:

20 pts

30 pts

5 pts

Today!

To be posted this weekend

Due last week of classes

3 RQ’s (20 pts), Test #4 (25 pts), + Final Exam ( 100 pts)

+ clicker pts (10 individual 5 group)

TOTAL OF

215 PTS LEFT !!

Page 4: Thursday Nov 4 th

CLICKER QUESTION:

Q1 In the film shown in class on TUESDAY, what was Willie Nelson promoting??

A – Solar powerB – Corn ethanolC – Biodiesel D – Hybrid trucks

Page 5: Thursday Nov 4 th

Wrap up of TOPIC # 13 NATURAL CLIMATIC

FORCING:

Volcanic Eruptions

(pp 71-74)

Page 6: Thursday Nov 4 th

How the Climatic Effect Occurs . . . . through the ENERGY BALANCE

of course!

p 71

Page 7: Thursday Nov 4 th

Mt MerapiLatitude: 7°32'30"S

“Indonesia's Mount Merapi erupted with renewed strength on Wednesday, the fourth eruption in eight days, forcing authorities to move refugee shelters further away from the volcano, a vulcanology official said.

The volcano, near Yogyakarta on Java island, spewed clouds of ash and gas 5 km (3 miles) into the sky for more than an hour on Wednesday, its biggest eruption so far in the past 10 days.

Page 8: Thursday Nov 4 th

How CLIMATICALLY EFFECTIVE will this eruption be??

Hint: See p 39

Q2 - Will it get into the stratosphere?

1 – YES2 - NO, Probably not

Page 9: Thursday Nov 4 th

WHICH ERUPTIONS ARE THE MOST CLIMATICALLY

EFFECTIVE?

• EXPLOSIVE

high SULFUR content in magma

whose eruption clouds inject into the STRATOSPHERE

Low Latitude Eruptionsp 72

Page 10: Thursday Nov 4 th

Q3 Why do you think Low Latitude eruptions are more climatically effective and have more of a effect?

1. Because the temperature is warmer in tropical latitudes and hot air rises.

2. Because the Hadley Cell circulation can distribute the volcanic aerosols into both hemispheres if the eruption occurs near the equator.

3. Because the tropopause is lower over Low Latitudes and hence its easier for aerosols to get injected into the stratosphere where they will not be rained out.

Page 11: Thursday Nov 4 th

Q3 Why do you think Low Latitude eruptions are more climatically effective and have more of a effect?

1. Because the temperature is warmer in tropical latitudes and hot air rises.

2. Because the Hadley Cell circulation can distribute the volcanic aerosols into both hemispheres if the eruption occurs near the equator.

3. Because the tropopause is lower over Low Latitudes and hence its easier for aerosols to get injected into the stratosphere where they will not be rained out.

Page 12: Thursday Nov 4 th

The GEOGRAPHIC LOCATION of the erupting volcano influences the climatic effectiveness of an eruption because of the General Circulation of the Atmosphere.

Low latitude eruption clouds get circulated more broadly & in both hemispheres p 72

Page 13: Thursday Nov 4 th

HOW DO REGIONAL CLIMATES RESPOND TO AN EXPLOSIVE ERUPTION?

 

In general, explosive eruptions warm the stratosphere and cool the troposphere, especially during the summer season.

p 72

Page 14: Thursday Nov 4 th

Major tropical eruption:

• Stratospheric heating is larger in the tropics enhanced pole-to-equator temperature gradient, esp. in winter.

N.H. winter enhanced gradient produces a stronger polar vortex stationary wave pattern of tropospheric circulation resulting in winter warming of NH continents. p 72

Page 15: Thursday Nov 4 th

HOW MUCH TROPOSPHERIC COOLING CAN OCCUR AND HOW LONG DOES IT LAST?

Individual large eruptions can result in a 1-to-3 year cooling of average surface temperatures of 0.3 to 0.7º C.

Tambora in 1815Krakatau in 1883Agung in 1963El Chichon in 1982

p 72

Page 16: Thursday Nov 4 th

HOW IMPORTANT IS EXPLOSIVE VOLCANISM AS A FORCING MECHANISM FOR PAST AND FUTURE CLIMATE CHANGES?

interdecadal climate change (“Little Ice Age”)

Individual years, such as 1816, the “Year without a Summer” after the eruption of Tambora in 1815

Link not always conclusive –

e.g., El Nino at same time, etc.

p 72

Page 17: Thursday Nov 4 th

p 72

Page 18: Thursday Nov 4 th

Typical Global Cooling Pattern after a Volcanic

Eruption

p 72

This graph shows the global mean temperature changes for years before (-) and after a large eruption

(at year zero)

Years before eruption

Years after eruption

Average changes in temperature (based on 5 major eruptions)

COOLING

Page 19: Thursday Nov 4 th

Comparison Table of Eruptions

Latitude

Sulfur-rich if high H2SO4

How much magma how big an eruption

How muchaerosol got into each hemisphere

Estimated N.H. temperature change °C

p 73

Page 20: Thursday Nov 4 th

G-4 ACTIVITY ON VOLCANISM &

CLIMATE

P.S. This is one of my favorite questions to ask on the FINAL EXAM!!!!

Page 21: Thursday Nov 4 th

#1. List 4 reasons why Tambora in 1815 resulted in the largest GLOBAL cooling:

# 2. Give at least two reasons why the eruption of Mt St. Helens was NOT a very climatically effective eruption:

Page 22: Thursday Nov 4 th

#3. Which levels show a COOLING

and which show a WARMING immediately after

the eruption?

p 74

Agung (1963) Pinatubo (1991)

Write in the ERUPTIONS at top of page

** NOTE: At the time of the El Chichon eruption, there was warming taking place due to a strong El Nino, hence the temperature change after this eruption shows a different response.

When ANSWERING # 3 & #4 – focus on Agung & Pinatubo only

Agung

El Chichon **

Pinatubo

Pinatubo

Agung

El Chichon **

Page 23: Thursday Nov 4 th

p 74

Agung (1963) Pinatubo (1991)

Write in the ERUPTIONS at top of page

When ANSWERING # 3 & #4 – focus on

Agung & Pinatubo only

#4. Explain WHYeach level’s

TEMPERATURE responded

as it did to theAgung & Pinatubo

eruptions?

(by referring to the Radiation Balance)

Agung

Pinatubo

El Chichon **

C

Page 24: Thursday Nov 4 th

(at top of atmosphere)

Net radiation surplus

Net radiation deficit

Net radiation deficit

What do the black & gray areas represent?

REMEMBER THIS IMPORTANT GRAPH?

Page 25: Thursday Nov 4 th

SKETCH A NEW CURVE A OR NEW CURVE B to show how the energy balance would change if a major volcanic eruption occurred .

p 74

Page 26: Thursday Nov 4 th

A B

CURVE A CURVE B is

Curve A or Curve B can move Up or Down

due to a radiative forcing in SW or LW

SKETCH A NEW CURVE A OR NEW CURVE B to show how the energy balance would change if

a major volcanic eruption occurred .

Page 27: Thursday Nov 4 th

Smaller Surplus

Larger Deficit

LargerDeficit

If incoming energy represented by Curve A is

reduced (A curve goes down)

A moves down

Page 28: Thursday Nov 4 th

If outgoing energy represented by Curve B is reduced (B curve goes down)

LargerSurplus

Smaller Deficit

Smaller Deficit

B moves down

Page 29: Thursday Nov 4 th

LargerSurplus

Smaller Deficit

Smaller Deficit

If incoming energy represented by Curve A is increased (A curve goes up)

A moves up

Page 30: Thursday Nov 4 th

SmallerSurplus

Larger Deficit

LargerDeficit

If outgoing energy represented by Curve B is increased (B curve goes up)

B moves up

Page 31: Thursday Nov 4 th

Assume:

• that the eruption produces a long-lived aerosol veil in the stratosphere over both hemispheres

• that this veil reflects large amounts of incoming solar radiation back to space before it enters the troposphere’s earth-atmosphere system shown in the graph.

• Hint: you do not need to worry about stratospheric

warming for this question.

p 74

Page 32: Thursday Nov 4 th

Four scenario’s are possible for how you should sketch the new graph

IF CURVE A If CURVE B is affected: is affected:

Page 33: Thursday Nov 4 th

THE ANSWERS!

Page 34: Thursday Nov 4 th

#1. List 4 reasons why Tambora in 1815 resulted in the largest GLOBAL cooling:

#1 Low latitude eruption both hemispheres

#2 Large amount of eruptive material (50 sq km!)

#3 Aerosol cloud was HUGE and went into both hemispheres equally

#4 Sulfuric acid (H2SO4) content was very large

p 74

Page 35: Thursday Nov 4 th

#2. Give at least two reasons why the eruption of Mt St. Helens was NOT a very climatically effective eruption:

#1 High latitude – could only affect part of Northern Hemisphere

#2 Low sulfur content (also, low volume, didn’t get

to S. Hemisphere, etc.)

p 74

Page 36: Thursday Nov 4 th

# 3 HOW did the temperature at the 4 levels respond to the Agung and Pinatubo eruptions?

#4 EXPLAIN WHY – referring to Radiation Balance?

p 74

Level B (Lower Troposphere) – Cooled

Why? by stratospheric aerosols => less SW absorbed at surface and in troposphere, ALSO: less radiated up into troposphere from the cooler Earth’s surface

Level A (Surface) – Cooled

Why? by sulfate aerosols in stratosphere and therefore less SW got into troposphere to be absorbed by Earth’s surface

Page 37: Thursday Nov 4 th

p 74

Level C (Lower Stratosphere) – Warmed immediately after both eruptions

Why? Sulfate aerosols in the stratosphere absorbed some wavelengths of incoming SW and heated up, they also absorbed some of the Earth’s outgoing LW as it radiated up out of the troposphere

Page 38: Thursday Nov 4 th

TO SUMMARIZE: 2 KEY POINTS

• Major eruptions with a long-lived sulfate aerosol veil REFLECT incoming solar radiation back to space BEFORE it enters the mid- & lower troposphere or gets to the Earth’s surface, hence the troposphere & surface get COOLER after an eruption.

• The aerosols in the stratosphere can also ABSORB some wavelengths of incoming SW and outgoing LW, so that the stratosphere WARMS slightly after an eruption.

Page 39: Thursday Nov 4 th

WHICH ONE IS RIGHT ? Does the change affect CURVE A or CURVE B?

Show how the energy balance would change if a major volcanic eruption

occurred:

Page 40: Thursday Nov 4 th

A moves down, and B stays the same . . . .

p 74

. . . but eventually B will also move down a bit due to cooler Earth temps and less outgoing LW

Page 41: Thursday Nov 4 th

ZOMBIE BREAK !

Page 43: Thursday Nov 4 th

TOPIC # 14GLOBAL WARMING &

ANTHROPOGENICFORCING

TODAY’s 3 KEY CONCEPTS:

Carbon / Forests / Deforestation Computer Model Evidence for Anthropogenic GW Forcing Tying it all together w/ RADIATIVE FORCING GRAPHS

Page 44: Thursday Nov 4 th

TOPIC # 14GLOBAL WARMING &

ANTHROPOGENICFORCING

Part A - CARBON RESERVOIRS & FLUXES: Natural vs. Anthropogenically

Enhanced(or How does all that “C” get into the

atmosphere??)Class Notes pp 75

Page 45: Thursday Nov 4 th

“I'm extremely concerned that the Earth has a chronic disease, and that chronic disease is CO2 syndrome, it‘s something that's creeping on us.

We have plenty of fossil fuel so it's going to continue to get worse, and it's going to affect every aspect of life on the planet, from food production to drinking water to coastlines to the plight of the poor in the tropics, and so forth.”

~Wally Broecker , Paleoclimatologist

p 75

Page 46: Thursday Nov 4 th

CO2 & CARBON RESERVOIRS

CO2 in the atmosphere is one place CARBON resides in the Earth-Atmosphere system.

Where else is carbon located and how does it move (flux) from one reservoir to another?

Page 47: Thursday Nov 4 th

p 75

Major Reservoirs of

Carbon at or near the

Earth’s surface

Gt (C) = gigaton carbon

Page 48: Thursday Nov 4 th

Amount of carbon is expressed in units of Gtons (gigatons) of carbon: GT(C)

Amounts represent the MASS OF CARBON ATOMS ONLY, not other atoms to which C is attached (e.g. CO2)

p 75

Page 49: Thursday Nov 4 th

• 2740 Empire State Buildings or 77 Empire State Buildings made out of solid lead 

• 142,857,142 African elephants -- That’s enough elephants stacked on top of each other to reach from Earth to the moon and halfway back  

• Greater than the mass of all the humans on the planet 

One gigaton is . . . 

Page 50: Thursday Nov 4 th

p 75

Major Reservoirs of

Carbon at or near the

Earth’s surface

Gt (C) = gigaton carbon

Page 51: Thursday Nov 4 th

60

0.06

90

6

In Gtons

92.5

62.5

Major Carbon Fluxes

IN & OUT of the

atmosphere

1.5

0.5

p 75

(Contributes to GH effect)

Page 52: Thursday Nov 4 th

Biomass = the total mass of organic matter in living organisms in a particular reservoir.

p 75

The total amount of carbon in LIVING BIOMASS = 610 Gt

The total amount of carbon in the ATMOSPHERIC CARBON

RESERVOIR = 770 Gt(760 Gt is in CO2 gas)

(Definition on p 84)

Page 53: Thursday Nov 4 th

How does CARBON “flux” FROM the biosphere INTO

the atmosphere?1. Trees take in carbon

dioxide during photosynthesis.

2. Trees release carbon dioxide during photosynthesis.

3. Trees release carbon dioxide into the atmosphere during respiration.

Page 54: Thursday Nov 4 th

NATURAL FLUXES INTO & OUT OF THE ATMOSPHERIC CARBON RESERVOIR related to BIOMASS  = respiration & photosynthesis

FLUX from PLANT INTO ATMOSPHERE:

FLUX OUT OF ATMOSPHERE into PLANT:

p 76

Page 55: Thursday Nov 4 th

showing inflows and outflows (fluxes)

The Atmospheric Carbon Reservoir

p 75

Page 56: Thursday Nov 4 th

. . . leads to a

STEADY STATE

In the atmospheric CO2

“reservoir”

Where have we a STEADY STATE before?

Page 57: Thursday Nov 4 th

SOME DEFINITIONS:

Respiration = biochemical processliving organisms take up O2,

consume organic matter,RELEASE CO2, heat, & H2O

Decomposition = breakdown of organic matter by bacteria and fungi, RELEASES CO2 to the atmosphere

p 76

Page 58: Thursday Nov 4 th

Photosynthesis =

manufacture of carbohydrates & O2

from CO2 and H2Oin the presence of chlorophyll sunlight as the energy source.

Oxygen is released in the process.

Solar energy chemical energy

(Part of chemical energy is stored in living tissues & used by other organisms (consumers) that cannot use solar energy directly.) p 76

Page 59: Thursday Nov 4 th

PhotosynthesisRespiration,

Burning of Biomass, & Decomposition

Page 60: Thursday Nov 4 th

WHAT ABOUT THOSE ZIG-ZAGS IN THE KEELING CURVE?

p 76

Page 61: Thursday Nov 4 th

Trend due to anthropogenic increases has been removed.

CLOSE-UP VIEW:

p 76

Page 62: Thursday Nov 4 th

Oscillations represent seasonal fluctuations

driven by the balance between respiration & photosynthesis

(dominated by Northern Hemisphere forests) p 76

Page 63: Thursday Nov 4 th

GLOBAL VEGETATION PATTERNS

The largest forested areas are in the Northern Hemisphere

N.H.

S.H.

Page 64: Thursday Nov 4 th

“Breathing” -- ANIMALS vs. PLANTS

O2

CO2CO2

O2

PhotosynthesisRespiration &

Decomposition

CO2O2

Respiration

Page 65: Thursday Nov 4 th

JAN JAN

JULTick marks are at January of each year:

Photosynthesis > Respiration (CO2 goes down in SUMMER as forests “breathe in” more CO2)Respiration > Photosynthesis (CO2 levels rise in FALL/WINTER as forests “breathe out” more CO2)

Respiration > Photosynthesis (CO2 levels rise in fall/winter)

JUL

Photosynthesis > Respiration (CO2 goes down in summer)

p 76

Page 66: Thursday Nov 4 th

review

350 ppm CO 2

Page 67: Thursday Nov 4 th

BUT IS ALL THE EXTRA CO2

A BAD THING???

PLANTS DEPEND ON CO2!!!

Page 68: Thursday Nov 4 th

Mini- Zombie Break:

YOU TUBE!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0_VmMIbWKoo

Page 69: Thursday Nov 4 th

With rising CO2 levels:

Hence with Increased CO2 :

• some plant species will be stronger, more prolific, and may overwhelm those less able to benefit

WE ARE ALREADY SEEING POLLEN INCREASES FROM RAGWEED & OTHER PLANTS

And . . . there may be consequences we don't yet know !!

• others do NOT (C4)

• Other plants can make only limited responses

• Some plant species continue to increase photosynthesis (C3)

•Some plants can respond readily to higher CO2 levels

Page 70: Thursday Nov 4 th

Greater atmospheric CO2 concentration enhanced photosynthesis (due to “CO2 Fertilization”)

more CO2 being assimilated by plant

from the atmosphere less atmospheric CO2

Atmospheric CO2

Negative & self-regulating!

-

What kind of FEEDBACK LOOP?

. . . but the jury is still out on how well this negative feedback loop can counteract HUGE anthropogenic influxes of CO2

Page 71: Thursday Nov 4 th

LAND USE CHANGES: Deforestation practices increase burning & decomposition of large areas of forest

Page 72: Thursday Nov 4 th

CARBON DIOXIDE: Trends

Data from ice cores

Review

Page 73: Thursday Nov 4 th

Time Series Graph comparison of two ways CARBON gets into atmosphere:

p 77

Page 74: Thursday Nov 4 th

“Imagine if you took all the cars, trucks, planes, trains and ships in the world and added up their exhaust every year. The amount of carbon dioxide, or CO2, all those cars, trucks, planes, trains and ships collectively emit into the atmosphere is actually less than the carbon emissions every year that result from the chopping down and clearing of tropical forests in places like Brazil, Indonesia and the Congo. “

“We are now losing a tropical forest the size of New York State every year, and the carbon that releases into the atmosphere now accounts for roughly 17 percent of all global emissions contributing to climate change. “

November 11, 2009

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/11/opinion/11friedman.html

Page 75: Thursday Nov 4 th

Figure on p 175 in Dire Predictions

Data Source: UN / FAO Global Forest Assessment Report

http://www.fao.org/forestry/fra/41555/en/

Highest rates of

DEFORESTATION in red

Much of increase in China dueto AFFORESTATION = planting new

forests in places where preceding vegetation or land use

was not a forest

decrease increase

Page 76: Thursday Nov 4 th

from pp 174-175 in Dire Predictions p 77

Forest carbon emissions INTO the atmosphere ( + )

- Forest uptake of carbon OUT OF the atmosphere ( - )

Since ~1950, USA & EUROPE have become net carbon SINKS

(rather than sources) due to reforestation

Palm oil plantations

!

Page 77: Thursday Nov 4 th

thtp://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/11/13/2742229.htm

Some good news? . . .

Page 78: Thursday Nov 4 th

HAVE A GREAT WEEKEND . . .

. . . but DON’T FORGET RQ-7!!GO CATS . . .

. . . .ALL TEAMS!!

COME & GET YOUR EXAMS . . . .

Page 79: Thursday Nov 4 th
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"With the possible exception of Tiger Woods, nothing has had a worse year than global warming. We have discovered that a good portion of the science used to justify "climate change" was a hoax perpetrated by leftist ideologues with an agenda."

—Todd Young, new congressperson from Indiana 

"I absolutely do not believe that the science of man-caused climate change is proven. Not by any stretch of the imagination. I think it’s far more likely that it’s just sunspot activity or something just in the geologic eons of time where we have changes in the climate.“

—Ron Johnson, new senator from Wisconsin 

Some Quotes from the Newly Elected . . .

Page 83: Thursday Nov 4 th

"I think we ought to take a look at whatever the group is that measures all this, the IPCC, they don't even believe the crap.“

—Steve Pearce, new congressperson from New Mexico

"It's a bigger issue, we need to watch 'em. Not only because it may or may not be true, but they're making up their facts to fit their conclusions. They've already caught 'em doing this.“

—Rand Paul, new senator from Kentucky

"There isn't any real science to say we are altering the climate path of the earth."

—Roy Blunt, new senator from  Missouri

Page 84: Thursday Nov 4 th

So, how do we begin to sort this out – or do we even need to?

Is it just political “talking points” OR

a serious science-baseddisagreement characterized by

open-minded inquiry and healthy skepticism?