Week 2: Huerta Climate PPT
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Transcript Week 2: Huerta Climate PPT
5 major reservoirs
5 major reservoirs: atmosphere, terrestrial biosphere, oceans (and ocean critters),
sediments, earth’s interior
Short term cycle (days->years) Residence time=(Storage)/(Flux)
Long term cycle (millions of years)
Earth’s long term climate history: Is any of this
due to the long-term, geologic CO2 cycle?
Can mountains change the global
climate?
More recent (Pleistocene, Holocene)
Climate
• in last 1.8 million years
(Pleistocene) repeated
glacial cycles.
Glacial Consequences
• Sea level – Ice ages cause sea level to rise and fall.
– Sea level was ~ 100 m lower during the most recent
Ice age
– If ice sheets melted, coastal regions would be
flooded.
Causes of Glaciation (Climate Change)
• Long-term causes (millions of years) – Set the stage
for ice ages.
– Plate tectonics – Controls factors that influence
glaciation.
• Distribution of continents toward high latitudes.
• Sea-level flux by mid-ocean-ridge volume changes.
• Oceanic currents.
– Atmospheric chemistry.
• Changes in greenhouse
gas concentrations.
– Carbon dioxide (CO2).
– Methane (CH4).
Long-Term Climate Change
What causes long-term climate changes?
Volcanic gases trap heat, promote global warming.
Mid-Cretaceous rifting and expanded mid-ocean ridges.
Orogenic uplift consumes CO2 in rock weathering.
Leads to overall climatic cooling.
Uplift of the Himalayas attended Cenozoic cooling.
Essentials of Geology, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 19: Global Change in the Earth System
Causes of Climate Change
• Short-term causes (10’s to 100’s ka) – Govern
advances and retreats.
– Milankovitch Cycles changes in Earth’s orbit
Causes of Climate Change
Milankovitch cycles – Climate variation over 10’s to
100’s Ka predicted by cyclic changes in orbital
geometry.
• These variations lead to excess warming or
cooling.
• Ice ages result when cooling effects coincide.
Causes of Climate Change
• Short-term causes, con’t – Govern advances and
retreats.
– Changes in albedo (reflectivity).
– Volcanic Activity
– Sunspot activity
– Oceanic thermohaline circulation changes.
– atmospheric CO2 concentrations.
Global Climate Change
Methods of Study.
Paleoclimates – Investigations of past climatic variation.
Computer simulations – Modeling past and future changes.
Essentials of Geology, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 19: Global Change in the Earth System
Global Climate Change
Paleoclimates – Past climates are indicated by datable
Earth materials that are climate sensitive.
Stratigraphic records – Sequences of rock strata.
Depositional environments are often climate-sensitive.
Coral reefs – Tropical marine.
Glacial tills – Cold and continental.
Essentials of Geology, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 19: Global Change in the Earth System
Global Climate Change
Paleoclimatic evidence:
Paleontological – Faunal assemblages reflect climate.
Assemblage changes record climatic shifts.
Pollen in pond sediments.
o Spruce (colder) vs. hemlock (warmer).
o Trees (colder, drier) vs. grasses (warmer, wetter).
Essentials of Geology, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 19: Global Change in the Earth System
Global Climate Change
Paleoclimates:
Oxygen isotopes – Two isotopes:
16O
and 18O.
16O water evaporates faster than 18O water. During ice ages…
16O in seawater evaporates faster.
This water is trapped on land as ice.
Seas become 16O depleted, 18O enriched.
18O/16O increases in remaining seawater.
Shells grown in this sea will reflect the altered 18O/16O ratio.
Essentials of Geology, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 19: Global Change in the Earth System
Global Climate Change
Paleoclimates:
16O
water evaporates faster than
18O water. During interglacials…
Melting ice returns water to oceans.
16O returns to oceans.
18O/16O decreases.
Reflected in shells.
400 Ka of 18O/16O data are archived
in polar-region ice cores.
Essentials of Geology, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 19: Global Change in the Earth System
Global Climate Change
Paleoclimates:
Oxygen isotope ratios are preserved
in carbonate shells.
The oxygen in CaCO3 shells mirrors
oceanic 18O/16O.
Sea floor sediments preserve ocean
chemistry changes.
Essentials of Geology, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 19: Global Change in the Earth System
Global Climate Change
Paleoclimates:
Growth rings – Tree rings can easily be dated.
Ring thickness reflects climatic changes.
Wetter, warmer = thicker; drier, colder = thinner.
Ring widths form time sequences.
Overlapping sequences yield a time scale.
Essentials of Geology, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 19: Global Change in the Earth System
1. Overview of Climate
What Causes the Climate to Vary?
Plate Tectonics
Volcanic Activity
Sun
Humans
Anthropogenic Changes
Global warming – Human GHG additions alter climate.
CO2 in the atmosphere has steadily climbed since 1958.
In 1958, CO2 was ~ 315 ppm; in 2000, CO2 was ~ 370 ppm.
Human additions of CO2 and CH4 outstrip natural removals.
Fossil fuel combustion (CO2).
Rice-paddy decay (CH4).
Cow flatulence (CH4).
Essentials of Geology, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 19: Global Change in the Earth System
Th & Friday
Dr. Susan Kaspari (climate
scientist)
Essentials of Geology, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 19: Global Change in the Earth System
Exam #6
Thursday, 8:00 am
This Room
Will cover and readings and lectures on:
Groundwater
Glaciers
Earth System/Climate Change
Essentials of Geology, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 19: Global Change in the Earth System
Glacial Sediment Transport
Glaciers carry sediment of all sizes – lots of it!
Some sediment falls onto the ice from adjacent
cliffs.
Some sediment is entrained from erosion of the
substrate.
When glacial ice melts, this material is dropped.
Essentials of Geology, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 19: Global Change in the Earth System
Sediment Transport on Ice
Moraines – Unsorted debris
dumped by a glacier.
Lateral – Forms along the flank
of a valley glacier.
Medial – Mid-ice moraine from
merging lateral moraines.
Essentials of Geology, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 19: Global Change in the Earth System
Depositional Landforms
End moraines form at the stable toe of a glacier.
Essentials of Geology, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 19: Global Change in the Earth System