ATOC 1060
Which usage consumes the greatest amount of water in the US?
Agriculture
NH3
Ammonia
What was the Younger Dryas?
An abrupt period of re-glaciation from about 13,000 years ago to about 12,000 years ago
Forcing
An ongoing disturbance of a systemEx: solar brightening, anthropogenic release of greenhouse gas
Heterotroph
An organism that depends on other organisms to produce food (consumer)
2CH2O = CO2 + CH4
Anaerobic Respiration (Methanogensis), putting carbon in
When was the first fossil evidence of life
3.5 BYA
How old is the earliest isotopic evidence of life on Earth?
3.8 BY
When was the first global evidence of life on earth found
3.8 BYA
Ocean sediment cores show how many major glaciations every 100,000 years
700,000
True/False: The US has reduced our CO2 emissions since 2007.
True
True/False: The tropics receive a surplus of net radiation, and the poles receive a deficit.
True
How much did the average CO2 concentration increase from 1958 to 2008
Approximately 22%
Methanogens belong to which domain of the tree of life?
Archaea
What type of radiation does the stratospheric ozone layer absorb?
Ultraviolet
What is the use of lead isotopes?
Used for dating older material
Limitations to renewable energy sources
Variable with location and condition and currently they only make up 9% of energy consumption
Which terrestrial planet has the greatest greenhouse effect
Venus
By what mechanism did Earth recover from "Snowball Earth?"
Volcanism continued to outgas CO2 which increased the greenhouse effect.
Ekman Transport
Warm surface waters are pushed tot he center of the gyres, where they "pile up" and raise the sea level
Because of Ocean Circulation, which way does the ocean surface slope?
West to East, because water piles up in the west
If wind moves SOUTH where will water move and what will it cause
West, downwelling
Permafrost
When it melts it releases methane into the atmosphere and increases temp. and then further melting. (positive feedback)
Convergent Boundaries
When plates are moving toward each other, EX: Deep Sea trenches
Divergent Boundaries
When plates move away from each other, EX: Mid Ocean Ridges
When will be the next clumping
about 200 MY
Approximately what fraction of global heat transfer from the tropics to the poles does ocean circulation contribute (as opposed to atmospheric circulation)
about half
How much land does snow cover in the winter North of 20 degrees N.
about half
Energy conservation solutions
better home insulation, more efficient appliances, better fuel economy, compact fluorescent lights and LED's, telecommuting
Based on the Minnesota study of climate change impacts on forests, which species of tree will decline with increased CO2 and global warming?
Aspen
What are the most important reservoirs of warming
Atmosphere CH4 and CO2
Without land what would ocean circulation mirror?
Atmospheric circulation
Producer
Autotrophs, they form the base of the food web, produce organic matter fro inorganic compounds
ClO
chlorine Oxide
Cyanobacteria
Bacteria capable of both oxygenic and anoxygenic photosynthesis, formerly known as blue-green algae
Stern Review on Economics of Global Warming
Concluded that the costs of adaption could be up to 30% of the GDP
Cloud Cooling
cover nearly 1/2 the earth and reflect sunlight
Thermokarst
devastating depressions left when permafrost melts
Why are ocean sediments that form during glaciations higher in 18O?
Because more 16O is locked up in ice during glaciations.
Why doesn't the circulation pattern in the above question make a complete single circuit from equator to poles?
Because of the Earth's rotation
Theory
has evidence to back it up
Largest Reservoir in chart
limestone in sedimentary rock
How much sea level rise does the IPCC AR5 predict to occur between now and 2100?
Between 0.5 and 1.0 m
Permian Extinction
Biggest Extinction. Extinct 96% marine life and 70% land life. Took 10 million years for life to recover
What were the first organisms to produce oxygen?
Cyanobacteria
Walker Circulation
East to West Circulation involving the trade winds where the ocean temp. gradient drives the trade winds ensuing the convective loop
If wind moves NORTH where will water move and what will is cause?
East, upwelling
Which direction do the near-equatorial trade winds generally flow?
Easterly
Negative Feedback
Effect subtract from cause (self stabalizing
Infrared Radiation
Electric magnetic radiation of fairly low energy and wavelengths longer than those of visible light from.7 to 1000
UV Radiation
Electromagnetic radiation of fairly high energy and wavelengths from 400 to about 10 nm, shorter than those of visible radiation
What will have to happen for CO2 concentrations to stabilize at 500-550 ppm.
Emission must decrease
Ice Albedo Feedback
Especially important for glacial and interglacial variation. Involves albedo changes caused by snow and ice. As Earth Climate cools, the extent of wintertime snow and ice cover increases in temperate regions. (positive feedback)
What caused the glacial period that occurred 2.4 billion years ago?
Biological production of O2
Permafrost must contain water
False
T/F: The Cenozoic Era has been gradually warming.
False
Tidal friction is slowly causing the length of a day to decrease.
False
True or false: Earth is absorbing more energy from the sun than it is emitting.
False
True/False: Tidal friction is slowly causing the length of a day to decreas
False
True/False: Volcanic eruptions tend to warm the Earth for the first few years following an eruption.
False
Tree Growth
Fewer trees grow during glaciation, which causes CO2 to build up and temp. to increase (negative feedback)
Over the past few hundred million years, what negative feedback has kept the O2 concentration of the atmosphere between 13% and 35%
Forest Fires
What is happening along the mid-ocean ridges
Formation of new sea floor
During what time frame can fossils provide clues regarding Earth's climate?
From about half a billion years ago to the present
Over the Pleistocene epoch, in what state has climate on Earth spent the most time?
Glacial
Which ice sheet is presently melting faster
Greenland
c3 plants
Grow faster in higher CO2 but do poorly in high temp. Ex: all tree, algae, etc.
Composition of comets
H2O ice, hydrogen cyanide, ammonia, methanol, CO2 ice, rock and sand
The primary greenhouse gases of the early atmosphere
H2O, NH3, CO2
Cenozoic
Has been gradually cooling, decrease potential due to decrease in id ocean ridge spreading rates leading to a reduction in atmospheric CO2
Thermo
Heat
Which situation would most favor glaciation? Assume that eccentricity is 0.06.
High obliquity and NH summer at perihelion
In what way are the gyres in geostrophic balance?
High pressure is balanced by an inward coriolis force.
Which type of cloud tends to warm the Earth?
High, thin cirrus clouds
Antarctic Ozone hole
Hole formed above Antarctica discovered in 1979 causes by CFC
Why did the US refuse to sign the Kyoto Protocol?
It did not place enough restrictions on emissions from developing countries and was therefore unfair.
Water management of the demand side
Recycle water waste, water wise crops, low flow fixtures
Keeling Curve
Shows CO2 tren over th elast 60 years, shows effect of plants on CO2 concentrations. Used in IPCC reports
What drives salinity?
Solar heating
Which property of Earth is not affected by the Moon
The length of a year
Which property of Earth is not affected by the Moon?
The length of a year
What is dendrochronology?
The study of the growth of tree rings
Which of the following is a negative feedback for glaciation?
The terrestrial biomass feedback
What is not true of an El Niño event
The thermocline raises in the eastern Pacific.
What do we call a type of ecosystem classified by its climate
Biome
Where did Earth's atmosphere and oceans come from?
They were outgassed by volcanoes and They were outgassed by volcanoes.
Where did Earth's atmosphere and oceans come from
They were outgassed by volcanoes. and They were brought in by comets.
La Niña can be considered an enhancement of the normal conditions in the tropical Pacific.
True
The planet can regulate temperature based solely on albedo
True
The sun rotates faster at the equator than at it's poles
True
What do the trade winds push
warm equatorial waters west
El nino occurs when the walker circulation what?
weakens
If all arctic sea ice is gone in 2100, what would happen
lower albedo
Moons effect of earths tilt
stabilizes the rotation axis, without it the tilt would vary by up to 85 degrees
What could droughts lead to
reduced glaciers and shortage of drinking water
Thermocline
temperature change dominates the density gradient in the pycnocline zone and the temperature drops rapidly with increasing depth
If all remaining mountain glaciers melted, by how much would the sea level rise just due to this?
40 cm
3.8 bYA the sun was how much brighter than it was today
70%
What would earths albedo be is clouds didn't exits
.1
What does the IPCC AR5 predict about sea level rise
.5-1.0 m. by 2100
If we completely stop burning fossil fuels how much would the earth continue to warm by
.6 C
How many degrees has earth warmed since 1850
.8 C
What is snows albedo
.8-.9 and it decreases as it get dirty
How much did the global average surface temperature rise during the 20th Century?
0.8 C
How much did the global surface temperature increase during the 20th Century?
0.8oC
How much warmer was it 125,000 YA
1 degree C warmer and sea level was 6 m. higher than today
How long will it take to return to preindustrial CO2 levels
1 million years
What percentage of Earth's biomass are consumers (heterotrophes)?
1%
Approximately how long does it take the global thermohaline conveyor belt to recycle all of the deep water in the oceans
1,000 Years
On what timescale does the deep ocean come into equilibrium with surface concentrations of CO2?
1,000 years
3 acre farm, how many pounds of food can you grow in 20 yrs.
1,000,000 lbs.
If you can harvest all of the runoff from 1 inch of rainfall from a 2,000 square foot home, how many gallons of water will you have?
1,250 gallons
Why is ice important for climate?
1. High Albedo is important for temperature regulation. 2. Latent heat of fusion aides thermal inertia 3. Ice/ snow high insulation to thermal inertia
What is the importance of the cryosphere in determining Earth's climate
1. Its high albedo leads to a positive feedback. 2. Its latent heat of fusion and insulating properties lead to high thermal inertia. 3. Permafrost melting can release CH4.
What does the AR4 predict to happen by 2100
1.4 to 4 deg. C increase
How much CO2 does fossil fuel release
1/10 as much as photosynthesis but it is not in balance
In two half lives how much material will remain
1/4 of the original amount
What percentage of snow cover in the Northern Hemisphere lasts through the summer
10%
Approximately when did the last ice age end?
10,000 YA
The Ozone hole should return to natural levels in
100 years
Over what time period does Earth's orbital eccentricity vary?
100,000 years
How many times higher is the CO2 release from fossil fuel burning than from volcanoes?
100x higher
Fossil Fuel burning release of carbon
100x larger than the CO2 released by volcanos
What isotope ratio do scientists use as a proxy for photosynthetic rates?
13C/12C
By what percentage has CH4 increased since 1750
150%
During glacial periods what is the ocean water enriched with
180
When was the hole in the stratospheric ozone layer discovered over Antarctica?
1985
Approximately how long ago did atmospheric O2 begin to rise?
2 BY
Suppose that humanity continues to burn as much fossil fuel as we can until we run out. What is the peak atmospheric CO2 level that we will reach by the year 2500?
2,100 ppm
How much warming do computer models predict will occur if the concentration of CO2 increases to 600 ppm if they include the water vapor feedback?
2.4 C
How much warming does the recently-published IPCC AR5 predict will occur by 2100?
2.5 - 6oC
What does AR5 predict by 2100
2.5 to 6 degree C increase
What does nuclear energy make up
20 % of Us electricity and 8% of total US energy
How much has sea level risen since 1880
20 cm.
If all ice on Earth were to melt, what percentage of the current land surface would be submerged by rising sea level?
20%
If all the ice melted how much would be submerged
20% of land
How much does the IPCC predict that permafrost in the Northern Hemisphere will be reduced by the middle of the 21st Century
20-35%
If fossil fuel burning were to increase at 5% per year starting right now, in approximately what year would we reach 800 ppm of atmospheric CO2?
2027
If fossil fuel burning continues to increase at 2% per year, in approx. what year will we reach 800 ppm. of atmospheric CO2
2050
At what latitude will the sun be located directly overhead on June 21?
23.5o N latitude
How much did the minimum arctic sea ice decrease between 1979 and 2005?
30%
How much has the sun brightened over its 4.5 billion year lifetime?
30%
How much water can permafrost contain
30%
The Stern Review predicted that the long-term cost of adapting to climate change would amount to what percentage of the global gross domestic product (GDP)?
30%
Over the past 600 million years, when was atmospheric O2 at its highest concentration.
300 million years ago
By how many degrees Celsius is the Earth's surface warmed by the greenhouse effect on average?
33 C
What is the average salinity?
35 parts per thousand
Carboniferous Period
360-300MYA heavily oxygen rich at its maximum. Responsible for giant insects and much plant growth
During solar maximum, how much brighter is the ultra violet radiation emitted by the sun compared with solar minimum?
3x brighter
What is the rate of continental drift?
4 cm/year
How thick are ice sheets
4 km thick
What is the maximum thickness a glacier could be before the extreme pressure, coupled with geothermal warming, would melt the ice?
4 km.
Approximately how old is the Earth
4.5 billion years
Approximately how old is the Earth?
4.5 billion years
What percentage of the total incoming solar radiation is absorbed by the ground
45%
How does the per-capita consumption of fossil fuel in the US compare with the global average?
4x higher
What is Us consumption of fossil fuel per person
4x the world average
By 1990, the tropical rainforests had been reduced to approximately what percentage of their prehistoric cover?
50%
What percentage of its flux does our sun emit in the visible range?
50%
When does evidence suggest humans live din N. America
50,000 YA
How many times more dissolved carbon do oceanic reservoirs contain than atmospheric reservoirs
50x
How far back can fossil provide clues about past climate
540 MY or less
By how much would sea level rise if the antarctica ice sheet melted
57 m.
How many main glacial periods has Earth had in its lifetime?
6
Approximately when did the Holocene climatic optimum occur?
6,000 years ago
When did the Holocene Climatic Optimum occur?
6,000 years ago
If humanity burns all of the fossil fuel, by approximately what percentage will atmospheric carbon rise?
600%
By how much would sea level rise if the greenland ice sheet melted
7 m.
KT Extinction
75% of all species went extinct, marine and land based organisms were effects. Theories, sudden sea level change, sharp temp fluctuation, volcanic eruptions, meteorite impacts. High concentrations of iridium ere found at the KT Boundary layer
When did "Snowball Earth" occur?
750 M.y.a.
Up to what angle does the surface water move the direction of the wind
90 degrees
How much of earths ice is contained in the greenland and Antarctica glaciers
99%
How does the Stern Review propose to mitigate climate change?
A carbon tax
What do scientists think caused the Younger Dryas to occur?
A shutdown of the thermohaline circulation
Unstable equilibrium
A state in which the system will remain if left undisturbed, but even slight disturbances will carry the system to some other (stable) equilibrium state
Pycnocline
A steep density gradient, caused by temp. and/or salinity change, that marks the transition between the surface zone and the deep ocean. Stable layer
Halocline
A steep salinity gradient in the pycnocline zone that marks the transition between the surface and the deep ocean and salinity rises rapidly with increasing depth
Giant impact hypothesis
A theory of lunar formation in which the moon forms as the result of a glancing collision between earth and a mars sized body
Holocene Climatic Optimum
A warm period that occurred during the mid Holocene 6,000 YA. conditions were wetter in Africa and there is evidence of cattle raising in Sahara
Things that are good emitters of electromagnetic radiation are also good _____________ of electromagnetic radiation.
Absorbers
Snowball Earth
Almost all life extinct, glaciation on all present 7 continents. Evidence from tillites, glacial striations and dripstones. Atmospheric CO2 was drawn to low levels. Theories are positive loops between ice albedo and surface temp.
What causes the "anti-greenhouse effect?"
CH4 haze
Which greenhouse gas is especially good at absorbing Earth's peak emission at a wavelength of 15 micrometers?
CO2
Worst case scenario for CO2 emission
CO2 rises to 1,000 ppm by 2100 and show no signs of slowing
According to the IPCC, what will happen to the atmospheric concentration of CO2 if we reduce emissions significantly by 2050?
CO2 will level off at 550 ppm by 2100
In the inorganic carbon cycle, dissolved minerals and CO2 combine to form what substance on the sea floor?
CaCO3
CACO3
Calcium carbonate
CH2O
Carbohydrate important in photosynthesis
CO2
Carbon Dioxide
What is 12C/13C used for?
Carbon dating organic material
Eccentricity
Causes the distance from the sun to change, which changes the amount of sunlight reaching earth
Precession
Change in the direction of Earth's rotation axis
Which country currently is the largest emitter of CO2?
China
If you are in a boat on the ocean in a region coinciding with the ITCZ, what kind of weather are you likely experiencing?
Clear, dry
What is not considered part of the cryosphere?
Cloud ice
What does Ekman transport cause to happen in the center of gyres
Convergence and upwelling
Are the centers of sunspots hotter or cooler than the avg. surface temp of the sun
Cooler, areas around the sunspots are hotter than the surface
Little Ice Age
Cooling in N. Atlantic from 1500 to 1950. It preceded by wet, cold condition in 1300's, leading to the black plague. Caused by volcanic activity temporarily cooling the earth
What does temperature do with depth?
Decreases with Depth
Gyres in the S. Hemisphere
Deflects water to the left
Abiogenesis
Development of life
What does Ekman transport cause to happen at the equator where the easterly trade winds are strong
Divergence and upwelling
What is the primary evidence that the Earth froze all the way to the equator during "Snowball Earth?"
Dropstones and glacial striation found in Australia
What contributes to the cycle of glacial periods
Earth's rotation axis changes over time
What causes salinity to vary?
Evaporation, precipitation, and freezing and thawing
Over the past 700,000 years, approximately how often have glaciations occurred?
Every 100,000 years
Approximately how often did glacial periods recur on Earth between 700,000 years ago and 2 million years ago?
Every 40,000 years
What caused the Permian extinction?
Extreme volcanism in the Siberian Traps.
Feedbacks important to glacial cycle
Ice Albedo and CO2 concentration
From which type of paleoclimate evidence do scientists extract data on atmospheric CO2 concentration?
Ice cores
Which positive feedbacks are important in the glacial cycle?
Ice-albedo feedback and Marine organic CO2 feedbacks
Where is the marine ecosystem the most productive
In regions of deep upwelling
What does salinity do with depth?
Increases with depth
Earth emits electromagnetic radiation primarily in what range?
Infrared
The evidence that a large meteor impacted the earth and killed the dinosaurs consists of the presence of what element in the KT boundary layer?
Iridium
What is not true of ocean circulation?
It is drive by solar heating
Where does most of the 14C on Earth originate?
It is formed in the upper atmosphere
Why is the stratosphere warmer at the top than at the bottom?
It is heated by O3 absorbing UV radiation
How did Earth's average temperature 125,000 years ago compare with global temperature today?
It was 1 C warmer
During the time of the dinosaurs, how did atmospheric CO2 concentration compare with today's levels?
It was 4x higher than today.
How did the sea level 125,000 years ago compare with the sea level today?
It was about 6 meters higher.
What happens when snow accumulates dust
Its albedo is lowered and it melts faster.
Why does air rise when it is heated?
Its density decreases.
Which planet is responsible for removing most of the leftover planetesimals from the solar system so that giant impacts on Earth are rare events?
Jupiter
Which emission scenario is the least effective in mitigating climate change?
Kyoto
Marine Inorganic Carbon Cycle
Largest reservoir
What percentage of energy in the US currently comes from renewable sources?
Less than 10%
What does the fact that hyperthermophiles are close to the root of the phylogenic tree of life suggest about where life may have originated?
Life may have begun in deep ocean ridge vents.
Albedo
Measure of reflectivity of a surface.
CH4
Methane
Over Earth's history, does the atmospheric concentration of O2 generally increase whenever CO2 decreases and vice versa
No because CO2 is influenced by more than photosynthesis
Which two processes have caused the 20 cm sea level rise
Mountain glacier melting and thermal expansion of water
What causes the year without summer
Mt. Tambora eruption in 1816
What effect does the perihelion and aphelion have on seasons
N. hemisphere winters are slightly milder than S. and somewhat shorter because the planet moves faster at the perihelion. Also, N. hemisphere summer tend to be longer and milder than S.
Composition of Early Atmosphere
N2, CO2, other gases but virtually no oxygen
Does the high correlation of CO2 and temp indicate that CO2 is driving temperature changes
No, correlations does not equal compensation. CO@ and temp vary in concert with each other due to positive feedback
Terrestrial organic carbon cycle
Nutrients that leave the biosphere form into earth until they are eroded or drilled and used as fossil fuels
What contributes to half the global heat transfer to the tropics?
Ocean circulation
What plays an active role in establishing continental climates?
Ocean currents
What does not contribute to Ekman transport
Ocean temperature
Water Vapor Feedback
One of the most important feedbacks in the climate system. If Earth's temp decreases, water vapor conduces out in the form of rain or snow, leaving less water vapor behind in the atmosphere. This reduction would cause a corresponding decrease in the greenhouse effect which would lower surf. temp. further (positive feedback)
CH4 +2O2 =CO2 +2H2O
Oxidation of Methane, putting in carbon
O3
Ozone
Ideal gas law
PV=mRT
CO2 + H2O + sunlight = CH2O (carbohydrate) + O2
Photosynthesis, Taking out carbon
What type of organism primarily comprises marine producers (autotrophes)
Phytoplankton
Upwelling results in what?
Phytoplankton blooms and marine vegetation
Montreal Protocol
Placed strict limitations on Freon and halon emission
If increasing temperature leads to decreasing sea ice cover which leads to reduced insulation over the ocean, what type of feedback process is this?
Positive
Kyoto Protocol
Proposal to reduce emission to 5% below 1990 level. 182 countries complies, US did not
CH2O+O2 =energy + CO2 +H2O
Respiration, Putting in carbon
Venus orbits the sun at 0.72 times the distance that Earth does. Given that the solar flux at Earth is S = 1366 W/m2, calculate the solar flux at Venus using the inverse square law.
S = 2,635 W/m2
Haline
Salt
What is the most imminent economic threat to low lying island nations with regard to sea level rise
Salt water contamination of fresh water and agriculture
Is 13C unstable or stable?
Stable
What do scientists believe is the reason that the earth stopped warming between 1940 and 1970?
Sulfate aerosols caused increased reflection of sunlight and therefore cancelled any warming.
Perihelion is January 3. How does this affect the summer season in the Northern Hemisphere (NH) when compared with an eccentricity of zero?
Summer is longer and less intense.
11-year sun spot cycle
Sunspots are caused by the twisting of the sun's magnetic field lines, which kink and then realign every 11 years
Given that the albedo of Venus is 0.8, use the value of S calculated in the above problem to solve for the Temperature of Venus in the absence of global warming. The value of the Boltzmann constant is s = 5.67x10-8 W/m2/K4 Use the following formula:
T = 219 K
Which volcanic eruption is believed to have caused the "year without a summer?"
Tambora
What have we learned about ancient climate from the Antarctic ice cores?
Temperature and CO2 concentration vary in concert with each other.
Which of the following statements is true of the Pleistocene age?
Temperature and CO2 vary in concert due positive feedbacks.
What do climate models predict would have happened to global temperatures since 1965 if CO2 increases are not included?
Temperatures would have decreased.
Temperature and CO@ negative feedback
Terrestrial biomass
Examples of Mountain glaciers
The Alps, himalayas, and andes
The hypothesis that the earth behaves like a self-regulating living organism is called
The Gaia hypothesis
What would we call a complete circuit of air rising at the equator, moving poleward, sinking at the poles, and returning to the equator?
The Hadley Cell
Many of Earth's deserts coincide with the meeting place of which circulation cells?
The Hadley cell and the midlatitude cell
The cryosphere is considered to be part of which component of the Earth system?
The Hydrosphere
Which Era on Earth was the warmest?
The Mesozoic
What do we call the negative correlation between sea-level pressure between the western and central Pacific
The Southern Oscillation
flux
The amount of energy (or photons) passing through a given area per unit time
Which region on Earth is experiencing the fastest climatic warming?
The arctic
What would happen if the air inside a hot air balloon had a higher density than the surrounding air?
The balloon would be negatively buoyant.
Divergence
The currents rotate in the opposite direction and results in upwelling
What happens during a Milankovitch cycle?
The direction of Earth's rotation axis precesses.
According to CO2 data from ice cores, when did the atmospheric concentration of CO2 first begin to increase due to human activities?
The early 19th Century
What happens to the oceans when the atmospheric concentration of CO2 increases?
The oceanic CO2 concentration increases and the pH decreases.
What do we call the region of global circulation where warm dry air from the midlatitude cell meets cold, moist air?
The polar front
Aphelion
The position in a planet's orbit that is farthest form the sun`
Perihelion
The position of the planet's orbit that is closest to the sun
Suppose you have an ideal gas in a rigid container of a certain volume. What would happen to the pressure of the gas if you doubled the temperature? (Assume the volume is unchanged.)
The pressure would be 2x the original pressure.
Photosynthesis
The process by which an organism such as a green plant uses sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water to produce organic matter and oxygen
Desertification
The process of fertile land transforming into desert typically as a result of deforestation, drought, and improper agriculture
Origin of Atmospheric 02
The production f oxygen by evolved organisms that were capable of oxygenic photosynthesis eventually led to the establishment of our modern, 02 rich atmosphere
Where on Earth is the troposphere the thickest?
The tropics
In which layer of the atmosphere does the greenhouse effect primarily take place?
The troposphere
Impact Degrassing
The venting of water and other volatile compounds directly into a planets atmosphere during impacts of comets or asteroids. Is though to be the cause of the formation of the oceans
How would seasons generally compare with earth if obliquity was 0 and eccentricity was .2
The winter would be longer and the summers would be shorter
According to the faint young sun paradox, the early Earth should have been well below freezing. What was the primary reason that the early Earth was above freezing?
There was a greater greenhouse effect due to CH4 back then
What effect did the 1997-1998 El Niño event have on the United States
There were mud slides along the California coast.
If there was no land, what would happen to gyres?
There would be none
What property of the greenhouse gasses H2O and CO2 allows them to absorb IR radiation?
They are triatomic
What did Stanley Miller and Harold Urey accomplish with their famous experiment?
They formed amino acids from simple chemicals.
How did the first humans get to america
They walked across a land bridge across the bering sea during the last ice age
How long can permafrost stay frozen?
Thousands of years
Triatomic
Three atom molecule that can vibrate in 3 ways. More complex molecules have more different modes of vibration and rotation and can interact with light in more ways
What do we call composite stones that are formed when glacial movement scrapes together an amalgamation of mud and various rocks?
Tillites
Which direction does Ekman transport push surface water in the gyres
To the center of the gyre
The Coriolis force causes wind to bend in which direction in the Northern Hemisphere?
To the right
Atmospheric circulation plays a more important role in climate than the ocean circulation
True
Atmospheric circulation transports just as much heat the poles as the oceans do
True
Ekman Transport is partly due to the Coriolis effect
True
Which portion of Antarctica is warming the fastest?
West Antarctica
When do snowflakes form?
When atmospheric pressure is low enough that ice crystals form directly from water vapor
If there were no land what would currents be driven by?
Wind and rotation
Stable equilibrium
a state in which the system will remain left undisturbed and to which the system will return when disturbed
Perturbation
a temporary disturbance of a system Ex: volcanic eruptions and meteoric impacts
Hypothesis
an educated guess that has not been tested
Autotroph
an organism that can derive its energy for growth and reproduction from either solar or chemical energy (producer)
Consumers
animals, fungi, and bacteria
Smallest reservoir in chart
atmospheric CH4 (methane)
what risk does snow and grauple cause when falling together?
avalanche and instability
Where is the densest water located
bottom of ocean
How does snow cover vary in the NH seasonally
by more than a factor of 10
Excess CO2 in the ocean forms
carbonic acid
Salt water intrusion
caused by rising sea level and will result in low lying aquifers being unstable
how does seasonal change is sun angle effect the flux
causes less flux in winter than in summer
Spread of humans across the globe is due to
changing climate
Deforestation
clear cutting and agriculture release carbon into the atmosphere from the trees and soil
In which direction do gyres rotate in the Northern Hemisphere?
clockwise
What does the Ekman Transport drive
coastal upwelling and down welling
What does equatorial upwelling bring up?
cold, deep, water
Westerly/ easterly winds mean
coming from the west/ coming form the east
Changes in air density create
convection cells controlled by high and low pressure zones
What causes plate tectonics
convection int he earths mantle
What is atmospheric circulation fueled by?
convections due to solar heating
When does sea ice form
each winter near the poles as ice crystals form out of sea water at -1.8 degrees C
Agricultural adaptions to climate change
earlier planting, harvest, and more drought tolerant crops
Positive feedback
effect adds to cause (unstable)
Moons effect on tides
effects oceanic and atmospheric circulation
In which direction do tornadoes rotate in the Northern Hemisphere?
either direction
Visible light
electromagnetic radiation of moderate energy and a relatively narrow rang of wavelength from about 400 to 700 ppm. Withing this range the color of light depends on its wavelength
Volcanisms relation to climate
eruptions can eject sulfate aerosols into the stratosphere, where they can remain for several year and cool the earth
When do the continents clump together
every 500 MY
La Nina occurs when the Walker circulation what?
gets stronger
Evidence of glacial acitvity
glacial striation, dropstones, erratics, moraines and ocean sediment cores
Evidence of Pleistocene Glaciations
glacial striation, dropstones, erratics, moraines, ocean sediment cores
Examples of Continental glaciers
greenland and antarctica
C4 plants
growth dependent on CO2. Can grow at lower CO2 and higher temp than C3. Ex: corn, sugarcane, some weeds
Paleozoic Era
had much variability, detailed fossil record
What slows the progression of springtime warming
high albedo and high thermal inertia of snow
High clouds feedback
high altitude cirrus clouds cause warming and outweigh any increase in low altitude stratus cloud, which cause cooling (positive feedback)
Proxy Data for determining past climates
ice cored, palynology, dendrochronology
how does grauple form
if conditions are right for the presence of super cooled water droplets to come in contact with a slow flake
What is 13C/12C used for?
if material ever contained life
Has solar luminosity increased or decreased over the suns lifespan
increased
What type of radiation do greenhouse gasses absorb?
infrared
What occurs during solar max.
intensity of visible light is only .1% higher, but intensity of UV radiation is 3x higher
What determines the flux on an object
inverse square law
How are wavelength and frequency related
inversely
Vertical changes in deep oceans are
large
We can determine the age of the solar system by analyzing which isotopes in meteorites
lead
We can determine the age of the solar system by analyzing which isotopes in meteorites?
lead
Nice Model
model stating impacts happened all at once instead of over millions of years
Studies indicate that since 1972, hurricanes have become
more intense
If humanity burns all available fossil fuel, how long do scientists believe would it take for the atmospheric CO2 to return to its pre-industrial level?
more than 1 million years
Where are the majority of deserts located
near 30 degree N. and S. latitude
Why is sea ice constantly in motion
ocean currents
What is the reservoir pertaining to ocean acidification
ocean dissolved CO2
Temperature and CO2 positive feedbacks
permafrost, Marine Biological, Shelf nutrient
How is flux measured
perpendicular from the direction of the source
Gyres in the N. Hemisphere
pushes water to center of the gyre
Water Management on the supple side
rainwater harvesting, larger reservoirs for storage, more efficient transport, desalination
Residence time equation
reservoir size/ rate of change
Are rocks semi permanent or permanent reservoirs
semi permanent
Renewable energy sources
solar, wind, geothermal, nuclear, biomass
Where the slope is low how much sea level rise could 1 m. mean
several km of retreat
Wave lengths relation to energy
short wavelength=high frequency=high energy
Is deep water circulation slow or fast? Why?
slow, because the ocean is largely stable
The deep ocean absorbs CO2
slowly
Horizontal changes in the deep oceans are
small
Which of the following atmospheric components has negative radiative forcing?
sulfate aerosols
Equation for half life
t1/2 of 14 C= 5730
Half life
the amount of time it takes for half of the material to decay
What does flux depend on
the angle at which light strikes the surface
Radiative forcing
the change in the outgoing flux cause by a change in the concentration of a particular gas. units w/m^2
What is Thermohaline Circulation
the circulation of the deep ocean; driven by density differences that result form variations in temperature and salinity
Deserts are located at
the convergence of two cells
Flux at sun vs. poles
the difference in flux is due to curvature in the earth and is why the poles are colder
What does biodiversity take into account
the different roles that different types of life play in the food web
Moons effect on Plate tectonics
the impact the created the moon is also responsible for plate tectonics
Wavelength
the length between the peaks
hydrological cycle
the major reservoirs of water in the earth system and the pattern of water storage and movement throughout that system
Biodiversity
the number of species in a given area
What is atmospheric circulation fueled by
the sun
What is the correlation between O2 and CO2
there is no correlation because CO2 is influenced by more than just photosynthesis
Convergence
thermohaline is pushed down which leads to downwelling at the center of the gyres
Cloud heating
they are made of H20 and absorb and re-emit OLR, which contributes to the greenhouse effect
Obliquity
tilt of the axis, this can vary from 22.5-24.5 degrees and causes the seasons
Temperature and CO2
vary are in concert with each other due to positive feedback.
How does volcanism release CO2
very slowly at 1/1,000 the rate of photosynthesis/respiration
What does the sun emit in
visible, IR and UV
El Nino surface temperatures
warm water migrates eastward and waters in the central pacific are colder than normal
Cambrian Period
warmer than today. large increase in biodiversity, rise of multicellular organism in the ocean. First land animals
Mesozoic Era
was much warm than today, age of the dinosaurs, extensive fossil evidence because of large animals warmer ocean waters, absent ice caps
When is 14C formed?
when cosmic rays hit 14N in the atmosphere
Sunspots
where magnetic field lines poke out of the surface of the sun