EARTH’S CLIMATE PAST and FUTURE SECOND EDITION CHAPTER 17 Climatic Changes Since the 1800s WILLIAM F. RUDDIMAN © 2008 W. H. Freeman and Company.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Big Melt Accelerates Jessica Ford New York Time May 19, glacial.html?_.
Advertisements

Climate Change Science
1 Changing Earth’s Climate. `The balance of evidence suggests that there is a discernible human influence on global climate ' Intergovernmental Panel.
3. Climate Change 3.1 Observations 3.2 Theory of Climate Change 3.3 Climate Change Prediction 3.4 The IPCC Process.
1.Sea Ice and Snow cover -Evidences As they melt mountain glaciers leave behind the an altered landscape with low albedo. a. shrinking glacial are around.
Climatic changes in the last 200 years (Ch. 17 & 18) 1. Is it warming? --climate proxy info (recap) -- info from historical & instrumental records 2. What.
MET 112 Global Climate Change – Lecture 11 Observations of Recent Climate Change Dr. Craig Clements San Jose State University Outline  How do we observe?
Part IV: Historical Climate Changes Lecture 18: The Little Ice Age (Chapter 15)
Key Questions about Climate Change. 1. Is the lower atmosphere becoming warmer? 1.The global average surface thermometer record shows warming of 0.4 °
Climate Change in Earth’s Polar Regions
Gary Lagerloef, PhD Science on Tap, 7 April Apollo 17 December 1972 Climate Science in the Space Age Gary Lagerloef Oceanographer & Climate Scientist.
Global Sea Level Rise Laury Miller NOAA Lab for Satellite Altimetry.
5. Future climate predictions Global average temperature and sea-level are projected to rise under all IPCC scenarios Temperature: +1.8°C (B1) to +4.0°C.
Current Climate Change: II - Sea Level Changes Thermal, melt water, salinity, geoid changes and relation to global temperatures.
The global threat of Polar ice melting. What’s the worry? Due to GLOBAL WARMING massive amounts of Arctic and Antarctic ice are beginning to melt. World.
CRYOSPHERE CHANGES These slides show photographs and images so that you can learn about how the cryosphere is being affected by climate change today. You.
EARTH’S CLIMATE PAST and FUTURE SECOND EDITION CHAPTER 16 Climate Changes During the Last 1000 Years WILLIAM F. RUDDIMAN © 2008 W. H. Freeman and Company.
Water… who cares!?!? Where do we find Earth’s water?
3. Climate Change 3.1 Observations 3.2 Theory of Climate Change 3.3 Climate Change Prediction 3.4 The IPCC Process.
Climate Change. Have you noticed any change in our summer weather? Our winter weather? The arrival of spring? Have you noticed any change in our summer.
Monitoring Earths ice sheets from space Andrew Shepherd School of Geosciences, Edinburgh.
Planet Earth is warming … Greenhouse Warming in 21 st Century Evidence that rising CO2 levels are changing climate Fresh water resources More intense.
December 2002 Section 2 Past Changes in Climate. Global surface temperatures are rising Relative to average temperature.
Introduction to Climate Change Science. Weather versus Climate Weather refers to the conditions of the atmosphere over a short period of time, such as.
 Climate change is a significant and lasting change in the weather patterns over periods ranging from decades to millions of years.
Erosion by Glaciers. A glacier is Any large mass of ice that moves slowly over land Think of it as a moving river of ice and snow.
Indicators and Effects of Climate Change. Major Indicators of Climate Change 1.Global Warming 2.Changes in Polar and Glacial Ice 3.Rising Sea Level and.
1 20 th century sea-Level change. The Earth’s ice is melting, sea level has increased ~3 inches since 1960 ~1 inch since signs of accelerating melting.
SNC2D Brennan Climate Change. Paleoclimate record Ice samples Sediment cores Pollen records Peat Bogs Fossil records Proxies –Use data that represents.
Unit VII. Global Warming Is the planet warming? How do we know? How confident are we? If it is warming, how long has it been warming? How unusual is the.
The Sea Level Rise Story Bruno Tremblay McGill University Slide from Steven Nerem – University of Colorado.
Environmental Effects of Increased Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide What is the Truth?
Notes 4 – Erosion and Glaciers
Teleconnections Current Weather Current Weather Finish ENSO Finish ENSO North Atlantic and Arctic Oscillations North Atlantic and Arctic Oscillations Pacific.
Global Climate Change: Environmental Consequences.
Carbon Dioxide Methane Nitrous Oxide Ozone Synthetic chemicals.
Global Climate Change The Evidence and Human Influence Principle Evidence CO 2 and Temperature.
18 April 2007 Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis Chapter 5:Observations: Oceanic Climate Change and Sea Level The Working Group I Report of.
Center for Satellite Applications and Research (STAR) Review 09 – 11 March 2010 Image: MODIS Land Group, NASA GSFC March 2000 The Influences of Changes.
The Water Planet Chapter 2 Section 1. Water Water covers 70% of the earth’s surface Examples: Streams, Rivers, Lakes, Seas, Oceans, Water Vapor, Glaciers,
01 March 2007Royal Society Meeting Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis Chapter 5:Observations: Oceanic Climate Change and Sea Level The Working.
CE 401 Climate Change Science and Engineering evolution of climate change since the industrial revolution 9 February 2012
EARTH’S CLIMATE PAST and FUTURE SECOND EDITION CHAPTER 10 Orbital-Scale Changes in Carbon Dioxide and Methane WILLIAM F. RUDDIMAN © 2008 W. H. Freeman.
Class #39: Friday, April 171 Mechanisms of Climate Change Natural and Anthropogenic.
Impacts of Climate Change on Physical Systems Lesson Plan 4 – Day 2 PPT
San Diego’s Vulnerability to Sea Level Rise Dan Cayan Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego and USGS North County (San Diego) Climate Change.
Global Warming Sceptics Bruno Tremblay McGill University
Teleconnections Current Weather Current Weather Finish ENSO Finish ENSO North Atlantic and Arctic Oscillations North Atlantic and Arctic Oscillations Pacific.
Years before present This graph shows climate change over the more recent 20,000 years. It shows temperature increase and atmospheric carbon dioxide. Is.
Chapter Meeting Ecological Challenges Key Questions: 1)How does the average ecological footprint in America compare to the world’s average?
Sea Level Rise. Questions 1.Why does water take up more space as it gets warmer? 2.Why does climate change raise sea levels? 3.How much has the ocean.
Ice Loss Signs of Change. The Cryosphere  Earth has many frozen features including – sea, lake, and river ice; – snow cover; – glaciers, – ice caps;
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 16 The Oceans and Climate Change Changes as Result of Global Warming.
Global Climate Change a.k.a. Global Warming. What is the green house effect?  A greenhouse is a house made of glass. It has glass walls and a glass roof.
WFM 6311: Climate Risk Management © Dr. Akm Saiful IslamDr. Akm Saiful Islam WFM 6311: Climate Change Risk Management Professor A.K.M. Saiful Islam Lecture-1:
Evidence of Climate Change. CO 2 levels historically rose and fell below 300 ppm. Increase since Industrial Revolution: now reached 400 ppm.
IPCC First Assessment Report 1990 IPCC Second Assessment Report: Climate Change 1995 IPCC Third Assessment Report: Climate Change 2001 IPCC Fourth Assessment.
Get ready to move seats. Again...
Evidence of a Changing Climate
Ice sheets and their relation to sea level
State of the Earth.
Radiation Balance and Feedbacks
The Land of Greenland Greenland is the world’s largest island
Antarctica and climate change
Climate Change.
Tuesday 4/4/17 Notebook Entry: How is reading a webpage different than reading pages in a textbook? What strategies should you use when reading a webpage.
Contemporary Sea Level Rise
The Geographies of Climate Change
California Science Project
Presentation transcript:

EARTH’S CLIMATE PAST and FUTURE SECOND EDITION CHAPTER 17 Climatic Changes Since the 1800s WILLIAM F. RUDDIMAN © 2008 W. H. Freeman and Company

Major Concepts: warming planet! Sea level change since 1880 –Source of records –Corrections for isostatic effects –17 cm rise; 4 cm thermal expansion, 5 cm mountain glaciers, 2 cm Gr +AA Surface temperatures since 1900 –Complications: reliability of early measurements, urban heat island effect m ocean temperature change since 1945 –Heat stored is 10X more than in the atmosphere and provides evidence of persistent warming Mountain glaciers –99% retreated between 1900 and 1980, average retreat over a mile Ground temperature profiles show clear warming –Record integrates century-scale warming that has diffused into ground Satellite measurements –Arctic sea ice retreating –Greenland thinning, Antarctica more stable –Tropospheric warming agrees with ground measurements Natural variability since 1800’s? –Pacific decadal oscillation –North Atlantic Oscillation

What correction needs to be made for most of these records?

Corrected record

Ground T recording stations

Corrected for heat island effect

Mountain glaciers

Important study from 2005!

Once collect temperature profile, model required temperature change at surface with diffusion models

Satellite measurements of Arctic sea ice

Satellite measurements of NH snow cover

Satellite measurements of growing season in Alaska

Satellite measurements of ice sheet thickness important part of climate monitoring

NOAA NCDC htmlhttp:// html

Table 17-1 (in cm) Ocean thermal expansion+4 Mountain glaciers+5 Greenland and Ant. Ice+2 All factors+11 Observed sea level rise+17

Short term oscillations? El Nino

Short term oscillations? Pacific Decadal Oscillation

Short term oscillations? North Atlantic Oscillation