CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

27
CLIMATE CHANGE DIF FERE NT DATA DIFF E RENT PERSPECTIVES

Transcript of CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

Page 1: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

CLIMAT

E CHANGE

DI F

F ER

EN

T D

AT A

DI F

F ER

EN

T P

ER

SP

EC

TI V

ES

Page 2: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

CLIMATE

• Definitions

• Climate change history

• Controversy

• Natural Cycles

• Human activity

Page 3: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

VOCABULARY

Climate

Geologic Time Scale Pre-Cambrian Paleozoic Mesozoic Cenozoic

Teriary Quaternary

Ice core samplingLogarithmicAnomalyEl NinoLa NinaENSOSunspot CyclesMaunder MinimumMilankovitch Cycles

Page 4: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

CLIMATE - DEFINITION

Definition: The patterns of temperature and precipitation in a region over time (from 30 years to millions of years)

How Researched: gas bubbles in layers of ice cores (obtained by drilling into glaciers and ice sheets) reveal time periods of atmospheric disturbance such as volcanic eruptions, CO2 concentration, and temperature variations

Page 5: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

CLIMATE CHANGE HISTORY / CONTROVERSYOnce considered unquestionable, arguments are reasoned from different perspectives depending on:• TIME FRAME

• METHODOLOGY

• DATA INTERPRETATION

• CAUSES

• MOTIVATION

Page 6: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

4.5 BILLION YEARS

Page 7: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

600 MILLION YEARS

Page 8: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

100 MILLION YEARS – LOGARITHMIC REPRESENT-ATION

Page 9: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

600,000 YEARS

Page 10: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

460,000 YEARS

Page 11: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

400,000 YEARS

Page 12: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

5000 YEARS

Page 13: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

5000 YEARS

Page 14: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

1000 YEARS – ANOMALY METHOD

Page 15: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

PAST 150 YEARS – “HOCKEY STICK”

Page 16: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

SUNSPOT CYCLE – AND ARCTIC AIR TEMP.There is also debate about the effects of sunspots on various

aspects of climate

Page 17: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

CORRELATION TO MAGNETIC STORMS

Page 18: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

15 YEARS

Page 19: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

SUNSPOTS AND HURRICANES

Page 20: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

SUNSPOTS AND CLIMATE

The “Maunder Minimum” from mid-1600s to 1700 correlates to the “Little Ice Age” experienced in Europe. Astronomers have noted that the current solar cycle shows fewer sunspots than the prior solar cycle.

Page 21: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

MILANKOVITCH CYCLES THEORY STATES:Changes in Earth’s axis disturb the distribution and intensity of solar energy reaching Earth

Page 22: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

ENSO – 3-5 YEAR EL NINO SOUTHERN OSCILLATION CYCLEEl Nino is the familiar name for a disturbance in sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the Pacific Ocean, is named for the December phenomenon occurring along the west coast of South America. ENSO is a 3-5 year cycle that includes both warming and cooling in tropical oceans.

Page 23: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

EL NINO YEARDuring an El Nino year, SSTs along the coast are warmer than usual. This prevents the upwelling of nutrient rich deep ocean water that is required to feed the fish population that reproduces there. . Warm waters mean greater rainfall in the southern hemisphere. But the northern hemisphere experiences a warmer, drier year as moist air is pulled westward by the Jet Stream. Climate effects ripple throughout the global climate system. Data for 2013 show only a relatively small increase in temperatures.

Page 24: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

LA NINADuring a La Nina year, SSTs along the coast are colder than usual in the Eastern Pacific (southern Hemisphere). This allows upwelling, but the effects ripple throughout the global climate system. Trade winds intensify. South American experiences drought. Wetter years occur in North America and storms increase in intensity in Asia.

Page 25: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

HUMAN IMPACT

Page 26: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

HUMAN IMPACT ON THE ATMOSPHERE

Human activity Gases emitted Impact on atmosphere / climate

Burning Fossil fuels

Agriculture

Deforestation

Industrial processes

Look it up!

Page 27: CLIMATE CHANGE DIFFERENT DATA DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES.

POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS

Look it up! See these articles and continue searching!

ENERGY EFFICIENCY - COMMERCIAL

http://wallstcheatsheet.com/stocks/how-much-energy-does-the-u-s-waste.html/?ref=YF

INTERNATIONAL CLIMATE CHANGE TREATIES / TALKS

http://news.yahoo.com/climate-science-alarming-irrefutable-kerry-093106799.

html

LOCAL GOVERNMENT ACTION

http://edition.cnn.com/2013/08/21/world/europe/bloomberg-why-sandy-force-cities/?section=money_news_international