1 / 14

Climate and Climate Change Chapter 21

Climate and Climate Change Chapter 21. 21.1 What is Climate. l ong-term weather patterns based upon temperatures and precipitation average temperature alone does not describe a climate r equires how weather varies through out the year

halil
Télécharger la présentation

Climate and Climate Change Chapter 21

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Climate and Climate ChangeChapter 21

  2. 21.1 What is Climate • long-term weather patterns • based upon temperatures and precipitation • average temperature alone does not describe a climate • requires how weather varies through out the year • average precipitation does not necessarily describe the climate • precipitation numbers must be broken down by seasons

  3. Climate description includes the following characteristics: • summer temperatures • winter temperatures • amount of precipitation by seasons • type of precipitation • sunlight • winds • direction • speed • steadiness • occurrence of severe weather

  4. Climate controls

  5. 21.2 Climate Zones • a location has a distinctive climate is base upon the climate controls • to help understand different climates around the world they have been classified by their similarities

  6. 21.3 Climate Change • Earth’s climate is constantly changing • minor heat budget changes can trigger climate change • global mean temperatures during the last ice age were only 5OC cooler than today • local temperatures show greater variation

  7. Causes of Climate Change • Climate depends on the heat budget • changes can cause warming or cooling of the global and local climates • Changes in climate controls • can cause both global and local climate changes

  8. Think, Pair, Share • What things can effect Earth’s heat budget? • What can cause climate controls to change?

  9. Causes of Climate Change • Earth’s motion effects intensity of the seasons • shape of Earth’s orbit varies with a period of 100,000 years • tilt of Earth’s axis varies between 22.1O and 24.5O with a period of 41,000 years • Earth’s axis of rotation precesses (wobbles) with a period of 23,000 years • Plate Tectonics – continents have not always been where the are today • changes in position affect • wind patterns • ocean currents • albedo • global temperatures (continents closer to the poles the temperature differences increase)

  10. Causes of Climate Change • Sunspots • Earth’s temperature may change due to the number of sunspots • increase in sunspots, the sun energy given off increases • decrease in sunspots, the sun energy given off decreases • Volcanoes • dust and sulfur dioxide injected into the atmosphere can stay suspended for several years • suspended particles can reflect sunlight back to space resulting in a decrease of Earth’s temperatures

  11. Human Effect on Climate • CO2 concentrations have increased since the 1800s due to • deforestation • burning and decomposing trees release CO2 into the atmosphere • reduces the number of trees available to remove CO2 • burning of fossil fuels • Earth is currently experiencing a warming trend • Scientists are trying to determine the rate and if it will continue to warm through the use of climate models and the studying of past climate changes • Climate models are complex and must consider many factors, those described so far and • effects of oceans • changes in greenhouse gases • effects of different cloud types on sunlight at different elevations

  12. Think, Pair, Share Based on what you have learned so far in meteorology and oceanography how do scientists know about past climate changes?

  13. Measuring Climate Change • past climate change evidence: • must use indirect evidence • sea-floor sediments • type and amount of microorganisms can give info on surface temperatures and changes over time • ratio of oxygen isotopes can indicate when there were periods of glaciation and no glaciation • glacier samples • Ratio of oxygen isotopes can indicate whether the snow fell during a warm period or cold period • tree rings • thickness of tree rings (growth rings) can indicate temperature and precipitation during the year it formed • tree rings indicate climate changes during a tree’s life

  14. Measuring Climate Change • Other indirect evidence: • Soil layers • Fossils • Pollen • Corals • Fish bones • Stalactites • Historical documents • Various geological features such as hardened sand dunes and glacial sediments

More Related