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This chapter explores the various factors that contribute to climate change, including changes in solar radiation, sunspot activity, dust in the atmosphere, land use changes, Milankovitch cycles, plate tectonics, ocean currents, and greenhouse gases. It examines how these factors can impact global, regional, and local climates.
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Chapter 15 - Climate changes • Changes in solar radiation are primary cause for climates to change • ~10% change in solar radiation output can dramatically alter Earth’s climate • Longer term changes in total output • Milankovitch type variations • Shorter term • Sunspot activity (?), Human intervention
Short term cyclic • semi-cyclic in nature are Sunspots • Cooler areas on the Sun’s photosphere • Magnetic anomalies that trigger cooler conditions • Less than 0.01% change in energy
Linkage between # of sunspots and mean sea surface temp (a function of global temp).
Non-cyclic short term-- dust in atmosphere many causes volcanic explosions droughts meteorite impacts humans Example-1815 Mt. Tambora eruption in the East Indies created a year without a summer due to dust blocking sunlight
Drought and desertification can create either a negative or positive feedback loop drought triggers dust dust decreases temp temp decrease may trigger rain or or may further the drought
Land use changes in Albedo different materials covering the land surface reflect solar radiation differently e.g., trees vs grass vs crops concrete vs blacktop, vs gravel Results in an Urban “Heat Island” or “Heat Bubble” effect surrounding cities Often cooler temps in agricultural vs city Often cooler temps in forest vs agricultural
Milankovitch cycles • small changes in Earths orbit around the sun and variability in its axis of rotation • Eccentricity - ellipicity of annual orbit • Obliquity - changes in tilt of Earth’s axis • Precession - change in position of earth along the annual orbit with respect to when the northern hemisphere is tilted toward the sun
Plate tectonics Changes in location of continents affects global energy movement and absorption Influences position of and strength of oceanic currents
Plate tectonics - impact on continental location with respect to latitude and oceanic currents with respect to continuity of motion
Changes in ocean currents • Modern examples of El Nino and la Nina triggered widespread interest in this area • Showed how important ocean currents are in relation to global, regional, and local climates • global - El Nino-La Nina • regional - coastal desert in Peru • local - cooler temps along the Texas Gulf coast due to proximity to water and sea-land breeze
Before- 1964 After- 1990
Non-anthropogenic sources of green house gases • Volcanic activity • CO2; S02; H20; • Biological decay • CH4 - Methane