ENVR 1402 - CH. 15
CO2 concentrations have increased about 0.5 percent per year since the late 1950s when they were around 315 ppm, so in 2018 they were approximately ______ ppm.
410
CH4
Decaying organic matter with no oxygen, as in wetlands, rice paddies, and ruminant animal stomachs
How accurate is it to say that scientists frequently publish fraudulent data, so we can't rely on their climate change studies?
Science depends on transparency and replication, so it is nearly impossible to publish fraudulent data (and to collect it in the first place.)
___________________ are cyclonic storms that form over land and have characteristic swirling funnel clouds.
Tornadoes
The direct and indirect cost of subsidies that support the fossil fuel industry are estimated to be ______ per year.
over $5 trillion
The Coriolis effect deflects objects to the right in the Northern Hemisphere, resulting in the Northeast ______ winds, which brought Columbus to the Americas.
trade
Latent heat refers to ______.
- 580 calories of energy per gram of water vapor - energy that is released when water vapor condenses to form rain or snow - energy stored in water vapor in the atmosphere
Observed climate changes include which of the following patterns in drought occurrence?
- Droughts are becoming more frequent and widespread. - New levels of drought are occurring in the Amazon basin.
Rank the following surfaces in order of decreasing albedo, with the answer with the most albedo at the top and the least at the bottom.
1. Fresh snow 2. White sand 3. Green Forest 4. Black fossil
Recent estimates show that the United States could provide 80% of their energy needs with renewables by ______.
2030
N2O
Agriculture, plant decomposition, and vehicle engines
CO2
Burning coal, oil, and gas; decomposition of organic matter in soils and forests
What keeps our atmosphere close to the Earth, rather than drifting off into space?
Gravity
Which of these best describes a jet stream?
Hurricane-force winds that circle the earth
The ______ Protocol is an international treaty with the goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
Kyoto
Choose the top two emitters of carbon as reported in 2010.
United States China
How is wind related to air pressure?
Wind is what happens when air moves from high pressure to low pressure.
The costs of reducing greenhouse gas emissions are estimated to be ______ of global gross domestic product (GDP).
about 1 percent
Areas of high pressure have relative ______ amounts of precipitation, as downward moving air warms and moisture evaporates.
low
Scientists commonly use computer climate _______________ to understand how systems worked in the past, and then project that information to predict possible future outcomes using both natural and human variables.
models
Sinking air creates areas of high ______________ and dry conditions.
pressure
We could reduce our use of fossil fuels by relying on ______ energy.
renewable
The approach of a cold front is commonly accompanied by ______.
strong winds and storms
Latent heat is important in regulating the climate because ______.
water redistributes heat around the globe
The IPCC concluded in their 2013-2014 report that ______ caused by humans.
some climate changes were nearly certainly
Swirling funnel clouds are a characteristic of a building ______, a cyclonic storm that is common in the middle of the United States.
tornado
The mid-latitude Westerlies are ______________ winds that are influenced by the Coriolis effect and in turn affect hurricane paths along the U.S. Atlantic coast
trade
Scientific evidence suggests that when the flow of the Gulf Stream is ______, temperatures in northern Europe get much colder.
weakened
The difference between weather and climate is mainly that ______.
weather is short-lasting and local; climate involves long-term patterns
Oxygen isotopes have different ____________________, and as such, evaporate at different rates. The ratio of the heavy to light isotopes preserved in ice bubbles tells scientists about past temperatures.
weights
Air movement from high-pressure to low-pressure creates .
wind
Which of the following best describes the timing of climate changes in earth's past?
Climate change can occur abruptly or slowly.
The IPCC, or the ______, collects scientific evidence for policy makers.
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
Shifting subsidies toward wind, solar, and conservation and away from fossil fuels would make alternative energy sources more economical.
True
Emissions-trading programs literally put a(n) on reducing carbon emissions, creating a financial incentive to do so.
cost or price
All of the following are effects we have already seen as a result of climate change, except ______.
thickening of the Arctic sea ice
Which of the following are effective heat-trapping greenhouse gases?
- Nitrous oxide (N2O) - Methane (CH4) - Carbon dioxide (CO2) - Water vapor (H2O)
What happens when a cold front catches up to a warm front?
- Precipitation occurs as the warm, rising air becomes cool. - The warm air is forced upward.
Earth's atmosphere ______.
- protects life from radiation - redistributes water - retains heat from the Sun
What is the Gulf Stream?
A vast current of warm water that brings heat from the Caribbean to northern Europe
What is a monsoon?
An intense, regular seasonal rainfall
The United States and ____________ are the top emitters of carbon.
China
Which of the following describes the Coriolis effect?
Winds (and currents) appear to bend left or right as they move.
A powerful, hurricane-force wind that circles the globe and that influences weather patterns is called ______.
a jet stream
A front is formed when two ______ of differing temperature and density meet.
air masses
The Keeling curve shows atmospheric ______________ dioxide levels have been increasing since the 1950s, contributing to an amplified greenhouse effect and global warming.
carbon
There is strong evidence to suggest that when the flow of the Gulf Stream weakens, northern Europe experiences _________________ temperatures.
cooler/colder
What do we call the boundary between two air masses of different temperatures?
front
The energy to support and strengthen a cyclone storm, such as a hurricane or tornado, comes from _____________ _________________ originating from warm water or land.
latent heat
Oxygen isotopes are important in recreating air temperatures from ice core records because ______.
lighter-weight isotopes evaporate more readily in cold years
What is the name for a regular, seasonal rain?
monsoon
The Milankovitch cycles refer to ______.
natural climate changes that occur in 26,000- to 100,000-year cycles
The most common gas in the atmosphere is
nitrogen
The chemical formula for _____________________ is O3, which forms an important layer in the stratosphere for absorbing harmful ultraviolet radiation from the sun.
ozone
The melting of permafrost could act as a(n) ______________ feedback to climate change as it will add more carbon dioxide and _____________, to the atmosphere.
positive; methane
The Gulf Stream strongly affects regional climates. Order these stages in how the Gulf Stream progresses from south to north up and across the Atlantic.
1. Solar heating in the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean Sea creates a pool of warm water 2. Circulation in the North Atlantic draws warm water from the Caribbean northeast, toward Canada 3. The warm current carries heat to northern Europe 4. Near Iceland warm water cools, becomes dense, and plunges downward
Which of the following types of data used to reconstruct ancient climates provides us with the longest look back into how atmospheric temperatures have changed over time?
Air bubbles in ice cores
Why does it tend to rain or snow on mountaintops?
Air cools, as it is forced up over a mountain, causing water vapor to condense.
Why does it rain?
Air cools, usually by rising, and water vapor condenses
Which of the following describes the Indian monsoon?
Convection over the hot, dry land surface initiates convective lifting, which causes precipitation.
____________________ storms rotate counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere and clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere as a result of the Coriolis effect.
Cyclonic
How much did CO2 emissions from fossil fuels change between 1970 and 2010?
Doubled from about 15 to 30 Gt
_______________ are cyclonic storms that form at low latitudes over warm ocean waters.
Hurricanes or Typhoons
The ______ curve is a measurement of atmospheric carbon dioxide that began in the 1950s at the Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii. It is one of the first indications that CO2 has been steadily increasing since that time.
Keeling
The El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is the cycle between El Niño conditions and the extremely cool coastal waters during the pattern called ______.
La Niña
Why does latent heat intensify cyclonic storms, such as hurricanes?
Latent heat, released as air swirls upward, increases warming and further intensifies the storm.
Choose the two most common gases in the atmosphere.
Oxygen Nitrogen
What was the primary goal of California's AB32 Global Warming Solutions Act?
To reduce greenhouse gas emissions below 1990 levels in stages
True or False: Climate can change abruptly.
True
Why does warm air rise when a warm front encounters a cold front?
Warm air is less dense than cold air.
Atmospheric ______, minute particles and liquid droplets, are important for capturing, distributing or reflecting energy.
aerosols
Most people mistakenly believe that alternative energy requires subsidies, but _____________ fuels actually receive more subsidies and tax incentives than alternatives do.
fossil or conventional
The IPCC reported in 2013-2014 that ________________ were the cause of recent climate change trends. (Hint: The answer is just one word.)
humans or people
The jet streams are becoming ______ as the climate warms and there is a decline in the north-south pressure gradients.
more irregular
The foggy and cool conditions in San Francisco Bay are just one example of how important ______ are in influencing climate on land.
ocean currents
Atmospheric convection patterns occur as hot air ______ and cold air ______ and heat energy is redistributed in the atmosphere.
rises; sinks
Compared to the transition between glacial and interglacial periods, temperatures and carbon dioxide concentrations currently are ______
rising very rapidly
The nature of scientific research is one of transparency, where data and interpretation are open, shared, and repeatedly reviewed. As such, ______ are untenable as an excuse in doubting climate change.
scientific mistakes
In order to reduce carbon emissions, it will be necessary for us to eliminate direct _______________ to the fossil fuel industry which are estimated to be over $1 trillion a year. (Use just one word for your answer.)
subsidies
Countries such as Sweden and Canada have successfully used carbon ______________ to reduce consumption and fund renewable energy, which all work to reduce emissions.
taxes or fees
H20
The most abundant GHG, but little affected by human activity
CH4
The second most abundant human-caused GHG
In a wedge analysis approach to energy policy, how are economic concerns and jobs understood to be affected?
They benefit from smarter policies.
Scientists and the public often think differently about climate data. Which of these are plausible explanations for this difference?
- Scientists are more familiar with reading trends in the data. - It can be easier to ignore or dispute change rather than acknowledge it.
By 2050, sea level rise is expected to greatly reduce the extent of which of these areas?
- The Bahamas - Southern Florida - Bangladesh
Which of the following describe the current state of emissions trading?
- They have been successful in reducing emissions. - Sometimes the pricing is too low to provide an incentive. - It is relatively easy to implement.
Carbon taxes are becoming increasingly popular as a way to decrease emissions because they ______.
- reduce consumption - fund renewable energy
The _______________ Protocol is the most well-known global agreement to control climate change by reducing greenhouse gas emissions. (Use only one word per blank.)
Kyoto
Troposphere
Turbulent; becomes cold at elevations of several km
Wind and solar are examples of _________________ energy, which can be replenished regularly, and may even be associated with less expensive construction costs than some oil and gas power plants.
alternative or renewable
Directly capturing carbon and storing it geologically, coupled with other activities such as reforestation, will reduce emissions at a rate that will be much ______ than pulling carbon directly out of the air.
cheaper
Rising sea level will affect millions of people because ______.
most of the largest cities are on coasts
Melting of polar ice represents a positive feedback in climate warming because ______.
open water has a lower albedo than ice, increasing heat storage
Choose the descriptions that pertain to weather rather than to climate.
- Storms (short-term precipitation and temperature change) - Temporary variations in temperature - Precipitation resulting from circulation in the atmosphere
Which of the following describe climate models and how we best use them?
- We include both natural and human variables. - They help demonstrate cause and effect.
The Milankovitch cycles are natural, long-term cycles that alter the earth's climate. Which of these are related to Milankovitch cycles?
- Wobble in the earth's axis - Change in the shape of the earth's orbit around the sun - Change in the earth's axial tilt
An important conclusion from this EPICA ice core graph is that ______.
- changes in temperature closely match changes in CO2 - CO2 concentrations have not exceeded today's 390 ppm for at least 800,000 years
The approach of a warm front is accompanied by ______.
- drizzle - wispy cirrus clouds
Order the layers of our atmosphere. Place the layer nearest the earth's surface at the bottom of the list; put the outermost layer at the top of this list.
1. Thermosphere 2. Mesosphere 3. Stratosphere 4. Troposphere
The EPICA ice core record, the longest one so far, reaches back _______ years.
800,000
How does the Coriolis effect work?
Air masses travel at a constant speed, but the earth below them travels at different speeds at different latitudes.
______ is a greenhouse gas that comes primarily from fossil fuel use, but also deforestation and cement production. The primary sources of ______ are from agriculture and decay. ______ comes primarily from agriculture, as nitrogen is a major component of fertilizer.
CO2; CH4; N2O
What causes the rising air marked at (A) in the convection patterns shown here?
Heat absorbed by the earth's surface causes the air near the ground to warm.
_________________ are tropical ocean storms that can be hundreds of kilometers across and have wind speeds up to 200 mph; they can result in coastal flooding due to storm surges.
Hurricanes/Typhoons
Mesosphere
Located roughly between 50 and 85 km of elevation; cools dramatically with elevation
What phrase best describes the relative amount of greenhouse gases (%) in the atmosphere?
Low
Why are ocean currents important in modifying regional climates?
Ocean currents redistribute heat from low latitudes to high latitudes.
______ is important in the stratosphere where it absorbs ultraviolet radiation, but it is considered a pollutant closer to the earth's surface.
Ozone
The El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is an atmospheric shifting that occurs in the _______________ Ocean, involving changes in wind, ocean currents, and air and water temperatures.
Pacific
Which statement best describes how greenhouse gas emissions changed between 1970 and 2010?
The emissions of CO2, CH4, N2O, and fluorine all increased.
Thermosphere
Warms dramatically with height, due to ionizing radiation
The name given to the circulation pattern at (a) is _______.
a Hadley cell
Match the letters to the atmospheric conditions at those locations.
a → Hot, moist, rising air, causing frequent rainfall b → Sinking air, causing dry conditions c → Rising air, with warm and cold air masses meeting, causing irregular precipitation d → Trade winds, driven by the Coriolis effect
Ice cores tell us about ancient climates because ______.
air bubbles contain tiny samples of the ancient atmosphere
Arctic ________________ describes that the most extreme climate changes are occurring at northern high latitudes because of the loss of permafrost and declining albedo.
amplification
The greenhouse effect refers to the fact that certain gases in the atmosphere, such as methane, ______.
capture and retain some energy in the atmosphere
Tornadoes and hurricanes are examples of ______ storms, which rotate counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere as a result of the Coriolis effect.
cyclonic
The "polar vortex" you may hear of or experience is a result of the ______________ ___________________ becoming more irregular because of warmer temperatures in the Arctic.
jet stream
Vehicle efficiency, building efficiency, new jobs and better air quality have all resulted from California's AB32 passed in 2006. Ultimately, these benefits save people _______________
money
This map depicts the processes involved in the Indian summer ___________.
monsoon
Albedo is an important factor in climate dynamics. Another word for albedo is ______.
reflectivity
The IPCC's mission is to ______.
review scientific evidence on the causes and effect of climate change
El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is an atmospheric shifting that occurs in the Pacific Ocean, involving changes in ______. (Select the best answer.)
wind, ocean currents, and air and water temperatures
Which of the following are major points included in the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement?
- Financing low-carbon development in emerging countries is necessary. - Each country's emissions reduction goals, and their progress toward them, must be publicly available. - Currently carbon reduction plans need to be revised.
Which two lines of evidence provide the strongest support that climate change today is linked to human activities?
- Increasing air temperatures - Increasing CO2 concentrations
______ is an effect of climate change.
- Melting of Arctic sea ice and ice shelves in Antarctica - Increased sea level - Acidification of the ocean - Bleaching of coral reefs
The Kyoto Protocol called for countries to reduce their emissions of ______ by 5 to 10 percent below 1990 emissions by the year 2012.
- N2O - CH4 - CO2 - fluorine gases
The Kyoto Protocol called for countries to reduce their emissions of specific greenhouse gases by __________ to __________% by the year 2012 when compared to their country's 1990 emission levels.
5 or five; 10 or ten
Carbon dioxide concentrations have increased by ______ ppm over the last 60 years.
93
Greenhouse gases make up ______% of the atmosphere.
<0.1
The greenhouse effect is the process in which the atmosphere retains long-wave radiation emitted from __________________. (Use just one word for your answer,)
Earth
Stratosphere
Extremely stable; warms slightly with elevation, as ozone absorbs solar energy
Extremely cool coastal waters occurring along the west coast of Central America and parts of the east coasts of North and South America between El Niño events are components of a weather pattern called La ___________ (or "the little girl").
Nina or Niña
We use climate models to discover the causes of recent climate change. How do we know these changes are human-caused?
Observed changes fit models with human inputs better than those without.
The 2015 _____________ Climate Agreement involved 195 countries agreeing on revising their current carbon emission reduction plans and having ____________ carbon emissions as their global goal.
Paris; zero, 0, or no
Americans object to the idea of climate change for many reasons. Which of these reasons is best supported by evidence?
Reducing climate change would require transitions to different types of energy.
CO2
The most abundant human-caused GHG
What is arctic amplification?
The most extreme changes in climate are occurring in northern high latitudes.
Collectively, minute particles and liquid droplets in the atmosphere are called ______.
aerosols
This graph shows that since about 1970, observed mean temperatures on land (black line) fit best the range of models that include ______.
anthropogenic plus natural forcings (pink shading)
The idea of wedge analysis is that very large problems ______.
can be broken down into small and reasonable tasks
Reforestation, improved forest management, increasing the _______________ content in soil, and using biofuels with ______________ capture together will make the largest contribution in reducing emissions. (Use the same word for both blanks.)
carbon
Warmer temperatures with climate change increases ______ in many locations which leads to less ______.
evapotranspiration; precipitation
Economists (as in the case of the Stern report) calculate that the financial cost of acting now to reduce climate change will be ______.
far less than the cost of doing nothing
Not only is the United States capable of creating all their energy needs with renewables by 2050, this transition would ______ in other areas including health care, employment, and weather-related losses.
save each person an average of $10,000 annually