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Updates

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  1. Updates • Trump to declare a national emergency at the same time as signing the interim budget bill. This will allow him to redirect funds to pay for the wall or garner unused money so far Republicans not happy because of the precedent it sets. A future Democrat President could invoke it for Climate Change. • Lawmakers seeking to block the president have two paths — one in Congress, the other in the courts. • Democrats could get a majority in the H of R to vote this down and may even get a few Republicans to defect in the Senate. Trump could then issue a presidential veto. Congress could then over turn that but it would take a two – thirds majority of both houses. • The money would come from either Defence or disaster relief and could use troops to help construction. • Mike Pence criticises Europe over their reluctance to sanction Iran. The UK, France and Germany do not attend. No peace in the Middle East while Iran is there? Or is Iran necessary for a peace? Spirited reply from Merkel • Trump – I deserve the Nobel Peace prize for North Korea and Syria.

  2. Brexit updates • The Brexit clock keeps ticking away. Theresa May loses another vote in the House Of Commons. Because many in her own party abstained • The EU is not ready to compromise as they assume if they do Mrs may will come back repeatedly for a bit more to keep people in her won party happy till march 29. • They see the UK arguing, debating and negotiating with itself again - as it has done so often during the Brexit process - rather than engaging with Brussels. • There will be a meeting of EU leaders on march the 21st. • Little enthusiasm in the EU for extending the time on Article 50 but that probably will happen. • Frustration and despondency with the Brexit process is widespread, and EU leaders (think Spain with the Catalan issue and wobbly minority government, France with the "yellow vest" protest movement; Italy in recession again and with its infighting coalition government) face other dilemmas screaming for their attention.

  3. Brexit updates • Why do people oppose the deal? • There are a broad range of complaints, many of which claim the deal fails to give back to the UK control of its own affairs from the EU. • One of the biggest sticking points has been over what happens at the Irish border. The backstop arrangement. • Both the EU and UK want to avoid the return of guard posts and checks. • 7 Labour Party MPS resign to sit as independents as protest over Corbyn leadership and his refusal to back a second referendum.

  4. US elections - Ocasio-Cortez – too young to run at 29

  5. the Democrats go left – the Republicans call it socialism • Elisabeth Warren proposes a wealth tax of 2% for those over $50 million and 3% over $1 billion (every year). 74% support among Democrats – and even 50% among Republicans. Sanders nominates himself. • Green New Deal - would centre around creating new jobs and lessening inequality. Aiming to virtually eliminate US greenhouse gas pollution in a decade, -radical compared with other climate proposals. It would require massive government spending. Carbon neutral by 2040. Pelosi a sceptic. • Currently the US gets 17% of its electricity from renewables and 20% from nuclear. • It would also aim for 100% renewable energy and includes a job guarantee program “to assure a living wage job to every person who wants one”. It would seek to “mitigate deeply entrenched racial, regional and gender-based inequalities in income and wealth”. • Strong public support (81%) but little support from Congress. Would the voters pay for it? • “This is going to be the New Deal, the Great Society, the moon shot, the civil-rights movement of our generation,” (Bernie Sanders and Alexandra Ocasio - Cortez).

  6. Climate change and history The Little Ice Age “some knights who were sitting on a magnificently outfitted horse gave the horse and their weapons away for cheap wine and they did so because they were so terribly hungry”. A German Chronicler in 1315

  7. The last great Ice Age- 110,000 to 12,000 years ago (from New Scientist) • Homo Sapiens shared the planet with Neanderthals whom they replaced as the Ice Age neared its worst 20,000 years ago. Homo Sapiens invented farming as they moved north following the retreating ice. • At the peak of the last Ice Age ocean levels were 120 metres lower than they are today – led to the “out of Africa” movement 60,000 years ago. Ice covered 30% of the planet then as opposed to 10% today. Temperatures were 5 - 7C lower than today. • As the glacial period drew to a close and temperatures began to rise, there were two final cold snaps. First, the chilly “Older Dryas” of 14,700 to 13,400 years ago transformed most of Europe from forest to tundra, like modern-day Siberia. After a brief respite, the Younger Dryas, between 12,800 to 11,500 years ago, froze Europe solid within a matter of months  – probably as a result of melt water from retreating glaciers shutting down the Atlantic Ocean’s Conveyor Belt, although a cometary impact has also been blamed. • Waiting for the next one. Are we postponing it with global warming?

  8. The last Ice Age • ..\..\ice_age.mov

  9. The Quaternary glaciation • There have been at least four other overarching ice ages in the Earth's history, the oldest started about 2,400 million years ago. • Compared to conditions on Earth 20,000 to 30,000 years ago we are clearly not in an ice age now • But in terms of the long history of the Earth we are actually still in an overarching ice age period - known as the Quaternary glaciation - which has been going for the last 2.6 million years. At the moment, the Earth is just in a slightly warmer period, an interglacial. • Lower sea levels (by about 120 metres) during the last Ice Age enabled homo sapiens to leave Africa 60,000 years ago. • Mini Ice Age from 6200 – 5800 BC. 5000BC climate and sea levels stabilise in current form. • It is possible that not just the Green house gases over the last 200 years have staved off the next ice age but also the advent of large scale farming that has been going on now for thousands of years.

  10. And in our region the land bridge

  11. The Little Ice Age

  12. Preceded by the medieval warming from 950 – 1250 AD • Temperatures in Europe were 1 – 1.5 C warmer than the average. Tree rings. • Wine grown in England – which the French tried to exclude from the continent. • London had the climate Paris has now. • European population explosion due to massive increase in food production. 40 million peasants to 60 million but life expectancy was around 35 – 36 years. 1 in 2 children still die before reaching their first birthday. A precarious existence. • Because Europe was an agriculturally based society it lead to prosperity, cathedral building etc. Gothic Cathedrals. • Crops could grow 200 metres higher up the valleys in Scandinavia. • The Viking expansion – sea ice less of a hindrance to exploration. Farming in Greenland. • It was global in scope – even China was affected. Art, Writing and Science flowered. • the indigenous peoples of North America pushed their agriculture northward up the Mississippi, Missouri, and Illinois river basins. Many farmed but no domestic animals • Humanity prospers under warmer conditions but not too warm.

  13. The Dom in Cologne

  14. What caused the sudden warming? • An increase in solar radiation. • A decrease in volcanic activity. • The ocean circulation patterns shifted to bring warmer seawater into the North Atlantic. • mainly a regional phenomenon caused by altered heat distribution rather than a global phenomenon. Not the same as now as some would suggest. • This pressure difference in turn revealed that the medieval period must have experienced a strongly positive North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) – the ocean current that drives winds from the Atlantic over Europe. The more positive the NAO is, the more warm air is blown towards the continent. • Or was it a cyclical change in the earth’s orbit and a shifting of the the earth’s axis?

  15. Regular changes in the earth’s orbit the cause? Bruce Key

  16. Life in the great warming

  17. But then the Little Ice Age began 1300 - 1895

  18. The little Ice Age – causes and effects? • Reduced solar radiation. Two solar minimums – reduced sun spot activity coincide with the coldest part of the Little Ice Age. Lately great increase in sunspot activity • Planetary wobble? • Snow in the middle of an American summer in 1816. • Increased volcanic activity. Laki in Iceland in 1783 and Tambora in Indonesia in 1815. Gas and ash into the atmosphere where they reflect sunlight. 1816 “the year without summer” – caused by Tambora. Krakatoa – 1883. • Sulphur dioxide becomes sulphuric acid higher up which creates aerosols for years afterwards. • Crop failures led to the start of opium farming in China. • Arctic actually warmed up leading to greater exploration. • Cholera epidemic after Tambora – Frankenstein in Geneva. • Changes in the weather circulatory pattern. Negative NAO – warmer weather moves south and colder Russian air moves in to take its place. Melted fresh water into the North Atlantic slows down the Gulf Stream.

  19. And epic sunsets Chichester canal by J.M Turner

  20. In England the Thames frosted over The last time this happened was in 1804

  21. The little Ice Age (1300 – 1850) • Best records are in Europe but it was global. Three main phases. Growth and prosperity of the 11th to the 13th Centuries comes to an end. • Food production plummets because of cool winters and wet summers. Cereal crops very vulnerable to 5 years of rain – more suited to benign climate. The great famine from 1315 to 1317 killed off 10% of the populations of some countries. Hansel and Gretel story. • Bad weather in the spring of 1315 – food production did not recover until 1322. High levels of crime, disease, cannibalism. Some populations did not recover until the 19th century. • The Black Death 1347 – 1351 – people more vulnerable because of hunger. • Pack Ice and storms expand in the 15th century. Greenland cut off and Iceland eventually cut off as well. • Glaciers wipe out whole villages, farms and churches in France and Switzerland. • 17th century – cod populations in the Atlantic wiped out. Cod in the Grand Banks – led to the colonisation of America. • Sea ice grew from zero average coverage before the year 1200 to eight weeks in the 13th century and 40 weeks in the 19th century.

  22. Somerset - 2014

  23. The Little Ice Age – other effects • Apart from famine from 1315 – 1322 and the Black Death 1347 -1351 there was also. • In China weakened by famine and floods in the 17th Century the Ming Dynasty is overthrown by peasants unable to pay their taxes and the Manchus rise to power. • In Europe witch trials coincided with the coldest spells – they were blamed for climate change. • 30 years war in Europe between Catholics and Protestants (1614 – 1648) sometimes directly linked to inflated grain prices because of falling agricultural production. • Potatoes come into their own – despite initial reluctance they could withstand the colder temperatures. • Hansel and Gretel. • New England settlers move to the Mid West to escape June snowfalls boosting the expansion westwards.

  24. Other effects - The Black Death • 1347 – 1351 from Central Asia. As Europe becomes wetter, Central Asia becomes drier forcing the Mongols to move looking for pasture. • Bubonic plague – curable only in the first 24 hours today. • Of some 75 million people in Europe some 25 million died. • Lowered resistance after years of hunger. • Imagined causes? Bad Air, God’s punishment, The Jews (massacres) • Actual causes – rats, fleas, dogs, urbanisation, the fleeing flagellants. • Reminders – ring a ring a rosy, abracadabra. • Save yourselves – abandonment, locking up, gifts to churches, bonfires, madness. • After effects, breakdown of the feudal order, trade guilds, improved wages. War also to blame (1337 -1453) • 3000 villages in France abandoned. 90% of the population were peasants who worked just to feed themselves.

  25. Sienna Cathedral unfinished

  26. And hunger • An absence of cider or beer meant that more people had to drink water and a s result the death tally rose. • Glaciers threaten alpine communities. • The Great storm of 1588 sinks and scatters the Spanish Armada. • 1590s – Tudor England at risk of food riots. 3 or 4 good harvest years were usually followed by the same bad ones. Hoarders denounced to little avail. No means of moving grain about to alleviate the problem. • 1607 – the winter so severe that frost splits trees in two. • 4 major cold snaps in the 17th century due to volcanic activity. • Late 17th Century – the Maunder sunspot minimum created vicious winters.

  27. More like winter than summer • London 1665 – 57,000 die in the plague. • 1666 – cold winter followed by hot summer – the great fire. House to be made of brick and stone in the future. 100,000 out of 600,000 homeless. • 1680 – 1700 very cold winters and cool summers in England and France. • 1696 - 1697 Finland loses 1/3rd of its population to famine and disease. • 1740 - bitter winter people froze to death – poor heating in most houses even the grand ones. • Accident hypothermia – shivering. Once body gets below 35C the body stops shivering, heart rate slows, blood pressure drops – cardiac arrest. • Famine also caused diarrhoea, dysentery and typhoid. • Growth of enclosures meant no more commons for animals. Move to the hovels of the cities for work at the start of the Industrial evolution. Poor diet. People actually get shorter by 5cm on average between 1830 and 1880.

  28. World War 1

  29. The Rhone Valley Glacier 1856 - 2008

  30. Weather basics

  31. Today’s Pressure chart

  32. How does the North Atlantic Oscillation work? • Westerly winds blowing across the Atlantic bring moist air into Europe. In years when westerlies are strong, summers are cool, winters are mild and rain is frequent. If westerlies are suppressed, the temperature is more extreme in summer and winter leading to heat waves deep freezes and reduced rainfall. (from Wikipedia). • A permanent low-pressure system over Iceland (the Icelandic low) and a permanent high-pressure system over the Azores (the  Azores high) control the direction and strength of westerly winds into Europe. The relative strengths and positions of these systems vary from year to year and this variation is known as the NAO. A large difference in the pressure at the two stations (a high index year, denoted NAO+) leads to increased westerlies and, consequently, cool summers and mild and wet winters in Central Europe and its Atlantic coast. • In contrast, if the index is low (NAO-), westerlies are suppressed, northern European areas suffer cold dry winters and storms track southwards toward the Mediterranean. This brings increased storm activity and rainfall to southern Europe and North Africa. • UK winter of 2010 – coldest for 30 years mainly due to high negative NAO.

  33. The North Atlantic oscillation (NAO)

  34. And for us - The Walker cycle

  35. and nearer to us - The Walker circulation and El Nino

  36. The Jet stream • Discovered by the Japanese in WW2 • A narrow river of air between 5 – 10 kms wide. • Can reach speeds of up to 400km/h. • Moves weather system with it. • To be found at the boundaries of cold and warm air masses. • If it moves south in the northern hemisphere it brings colder weather and vice versa if it moves up from the South. • Erratic

  37. How it happened

  38. The only ones to die

  39. The Thermohaline Conveyor

  40. The Thermohaline conveyor – what does it do? • The ocean conveyor gets its “start” in the Norwegian Sea, where warm water from the Gulf Stream heats the atmosphere in the cold northern latitudes. • This loss of heat to the atmosphere makes the water cooler and denser, causing it to sink to the bottom of the ocean. • As more warm water is transported north, the cooler water sinks and moves south to make room for the incoming warm water. • This cold bottom water flows south of the equator all the way down to Antarctica. • Eventually, the cold bottom waters return to the surface through mixing and wind-driven upwelling, continuing the conveyor belt that encircles the globe. • The whole process takes about 1000 years. • The warm current flowing from America to East Africa and Western Europe is called the Gulfstream. It is this warm water that gives Europe it temperate climate and Britain its rain.

  41. And on an English beach

  42. Will the warm age be followed by another ice age? • The Gulf stream gives Europe its milder climate. • In the past, the slowing of the Gulf Stream has been intimately linked with dramatic regional cooling. Just 10,000 years ago, during a climatic cold snap known as the Younger Dryas, the current was severely weakened, causing northern European temperatures to fall by as much as 10 degrees.  • Ten thousand years before that, at the height of the last ice age, when most of the UK was reduced to a frozen wasteland, the Gulf Stream had just two-thirds of the strength it has now. • The Gulf Stream could be seriously affected, as a result of large-scale melting of Arctic ice and the consequent pouring of huge volumes of fresh water into the North Atlantic, in a century or two. • Outflow from Nordic waters in the THC is already 20% down since 1950. •  another ice age is not likely to occur for thousands of years . Anywhere between 5000 and 45,000 years is a possibility.

  43. From reviews of “The Long Summer” • The Earth's climate shaped the ancient Egyptian civilisation by turning the Sahara, once relatively wet and benign, into desert, compressing life to the margins of the Nile. It destroyed the Mayans through drought in 900BC; blessed both Romans and Vikings with warm, prosperous climates; and freed the ice-covered Siberia-Alaska land bridge around 12,000BC, so Asians could cross and colonise America. • Lake Agassiz, a massive body of water formed by melt waters from the Laurentide ice shield that then covered much of North America, began to swell as the Earth's climate got hotter. Inevitably, it broke its banks some 13,000 years ago, sending a vast inundation of glacial melt water surging down the St Lawrence river. • For months, the freezing deluge poured into the Labrador Sea. 'Like an electric switch, Lake Agassiz's fugitive waters turned off the Atlantic conveyor belt, • The warming waters of the Gulf Stream were severed and the world plunged into a mini-Ice Age.

  44. Lake Agassiz

  45. Heures de notre Dame 15C and Van Gogh Harvester 1885

  46. The Three field system

  47. Safeguard - The farming revolution starts in Holland • Three field system – Dutch abandoned and used the fallow field to grow forage crops for animals. Peas, beans, clover and turnips. • More meat, wool, manure and leather came on to the market. • Land reclamation using wind powered windmills. • The arrival of the market garden using animal manure. Cabbages, cauliflower, peas and carrots in London by 1600. • Started in the 15th Century in Flanders and Holland but did not reach England until the 17th and 18th centuries. France later still. England copies Dutch land reclamation in the Fens in eastern England • Dutch introduce the cold resistant turnip to England – the tops often used as a substitute for hay. • From 1650 most realised that larger farms would break the back of subsistence farming but not necessarily famine. Farms became larger and more specialised.

  48. The arrival of the potato • First brought back by the Spanish in 1570. • Prevented scurvy, made for quick and cheap meals • Easy to plant and harvest. • Most people in Europe thought them exotic and probably poisonous. • Not Gentlemen’s food • 1700 - England potatoes grown for animal feed, then the poor and eventually everyone else. Spread to Ireland with disastrous consequences because of the Tumbler blight. • As late as 1750 France resisted the potato – suggested it caused leprosy and shunned by gourmands.

  49. The great change - The Columbian exchange

  50. Revolution in France • French fail to modernise as England and Holland had – turned up noses at potatoes. Cereal crops to eat and vines to sell. • 1670 – 1700 cooler years and wars led to food shortages. • Famine of 1693 – 1694 – 10% of France died while Louis XIV was at Versailles. • 1740 – Paris has 75 days of frost. • 1770s poor harvests – seed crops used. • 1784 - Laki erupts • 1788 - beggars roam in gangs intimidate farmers. Rural Crime –storms force King into a farmhouse. • 1789 – bread riots – military escorts for food wagons. July 14 the Bastille is stormed. • As the 18th century drew to a close, two decades of poor cereal harvests, drought, cattle disease and skyrocketing bread prices had kindled unrest among peasants and the urban poor in France. The French Revolution of 1789.

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