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How do we collect the data?
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How do we collect the data?. Who collects the data? IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change NASA Universities Meteorological Centres Environmental.

Mar 26, 2015

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Page 1: How do we collect the data?. Who collects the data? IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change NASA Universities Meteorological Centres Environmental.

How do we collect the data?

Page 2: How do we collect the data?. Who collects the data? IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change NASA Universities Meteorological Centres Environmental.

Who collects the data?

• IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

• NASA• Universities• Meteorological

Centres• Environmental

Groups

Page 3: How do we collect the data?. Who collects the data? IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change NASA Universities Meteorological Centres Environmental.

Is the Earth’s temperature rising?• Data comes

from so many different sources it can be difficult to tell! The UK meteorological society says no, NASA says yes….

Page 4: How do we collect the data?. Who collects the data? IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change NASA Universities Meteorological Centres Environmental.

What do we use to collect the data?...

• Thermometers• Dendrochronology• Coral• Ice Cores• Historical Records• Frozen Isotopes• Peat Bogs

Page 5: How do we collect the data?. Who collects the data? IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change NASA Universities Meteorological Centres Environmental.

Thermometers

• Many readings are possible

• Location is important

• Possible errors• May not pick up

slight changes• Not representative

of a large area

Page 6: How do we collect the data?. Who collects the data? IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change NASA Universities Meteorological Centres Environmental.

Corals• Corals are animals• Have a temperature range

within which they can live• Most live close to their

upper range• If it rises above this coral

bleaching occurs; the coral becomes stressed

• Stressed coral expels the zooxanthellae it needs to provide it with food

• Coral cannot survive without zooxanthellae

• Corals take in isotopes; these can also give an indication of temperature

Page 7: How do we collect the data?. Who collects the data? IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change NASA Universities Meteorological Centres Environmental.

Ice Cores

• Ice Cores are a bit like annual rings on trees; every year a new layer is laid down and this makes it a useful record

• Very time consuming though!

• Can be used to tell us the composition of the air and give us an indication of what temperatures were like

Page 8: How do we collect the data?. Who collects the data? IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change NASA Universities Meteorological Centres Environmental.

Ice Cores • Oxygen Isotopes are used to help determine temperature as well as air composition

• 18O evaporates less readily and condenses more readily than 16O

• During winter the heavier isotope precipitates more readily than the lighter one so less of it is found in the ice cores at the pole

• Therefore, each annual layer starts out 18O rich, then the level of 18O drops, before rising again at the end of the year

• The data collected this way can be compared with paleoclimatic data

Page 9: How do we collect the data?. Who collects the data? IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change NASA Universities Meteorological Centres Environmental.

Ice Cores• The analysis using oxygen

isotopes is not foolproof though – isotopes can diffuse as time proceeds

• We have been able to analyse data in ice cores from as far back as 300,000 years

• The ratio of deuterium to hydrogen can also be analysed to allow for a similar comparison

• As well as giving us an idea about temperatures (using oxygen isotopes) we are able to analyse the CO2 concentrations in the air

Page 10: How do we collect the data?. Who collects the data? IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change NASA Universities Meteorological Centres Environmental.

Ice Cores• Volcanic ash can also

be used to help us date an ice core

• This can be useful provided you know the exact date of an eruption

• Precipitation during ice ages was much more alkaline; again, this is a useful indication of the period the core was laid down in, but cannot give us an exact age

Page 11: How do we collect the data?. Who collects the data? IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change NASA Universities Meteorological Centres Environmental.

Historical Records

• The further back you go, the less reliable the data

• Modern methods much more precise• Human errors• Slight changes in temperature may

not have been measured• Useful as a comparison to more

modern methods

Page 12: How do we collect the data?. Who collects the data? IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change NASA Universities Meteorological Centres Environmental.

Peat Bogs• Can store vast

amounts of carbon; up to ten times more than other ecosystems

• Important carbon sinks• World’s carbon sinks

store up to two trillion tonnes of CO2 (100 years of fossil fuel emissions!)

• Draining or burning peat bogs releases CO2 back into the atmosphere

Page 13: How do we collect the data?. Who collects the data? IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change NASA Universities Meteorological Centres Environmental.

Peat Bogs as indicators• Atmospheric mercury can

become trapped in peat bogs

• Cold climates produce a much greater level of trapped mercury and vice versa

• When dating, human activity can also contribute to mercury levels

• Scientists also look at levels of decay (plant and animal), the presence of particular leaf species and the presence of various species of amoebae – these can all give an indication of climate

Page 14: How do we collect the data?. Who collects the data? IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change NASA Universities Meteorological Centres Environmental.

Dendrochronology

• Tree-ring dating• Size of xylem vessels• Many large vessels

laid down in summer• Few small vessels laid

down in winter• Length of the summer

and the temperature during summer period will affect the size of the xylem vessels

Page 15: How do we collect the data?. Who collects the data? IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change NASA Universities Meteorological Centres Environmental.

Dendrochronology• Trees can produce more

than one growth ring if conditions vary

• Comparison between many trees is needed

• Not exact; large rings doesn’t necessarily mean one thing

• Size of growth ring can be influenced by temperature, light intensity, CO2 concentration, rainfall or a combination of these