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The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate history of the atmosphere. t controls Earth’s climate? has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the present Permian and Carboniferous Precambrian – Snowball Earth …after Snowball Earth
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The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Dec 22, 2015

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Page 1: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate

The history of the atmosphere.

What controls Earth’s climate?

How has climate changed in the past?

Cretaceous to the present

Permian and Carboniferous

Precambrian – Snowball Earth…after Snowball Earth

Page 2: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The process of forming the Earth was complete by about 4.5 billion years ago.

Earth experienced a period of internal melting (due to initial high temperatures and heat from radioactive decay).

Dense elements (especially iron and nickel) sank to the centre of the Earth, forming the metallic core.

After Earth formation……

Page 3: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Lighter material rose to the surface (forming a thin, weak, crust).

Initial crust was likely too thin to support plate tectonics as we know it today.

Page 4: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Therefore, granitic continental crust must have been present by 4.2 billion years ago.

As the Earth cooled and differentiation continued the crust became thicker and continents began to "grow" due to plate tectonics.

First crust likely had a basaltic composition (like modern oceanic crust) and lacked continents.

At zones of subduction, intrusion of magma into overlying crust would have caused thickening to form continental crust.

Oldest continental igneous rocks are 4.02 billion years old.

Oldest sedimentary rocks (sandstones) contain 4.2 billion year old minerals.

Page 5: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The continents evolved over the past 4.2 Billion years due to plate tectonics.

Repeated collisions between early continents constructed the modern continents over time.

Page 6: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.
Page 7: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Earth’s atmosphere and early life

Initial atmosphere may have had a "primitive" composition, like that of the sun (gases derived from the initial nebula).

The modern atmosphere has a composition that is very different from that of the sun.

Page 8: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Ar40 formed by decay of K40, therefore, was derived from the Earth after it formed.

E.g., much more Ar40 compared to other isotopes of Ar in the Earth’s atmosphere.

Other Argon isotopeswere removed with theearly atmosphere and theArgon40 formed bysubsequentK40 decay.

Page 9: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Solar wind likely drove off the primitive atmosphere early in Earth’s history when all of the inner planets lost their initial atmosphere.

The combined composition of the modern atmosphere, biosphere, hydrosphere and sediments is very similar to that of volcanic gas.

Page 10: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The modern atmosphere resulted from "outgassing" of the Earth: emission of gases during volcanic eruptions.

Over time the Ar40 was formed in the Earth by decay of K40 and released to the atmosphere with the volcanic eruptions.

Note: there is growing evidence that the bulk of the atmosphere (including water) was delivered by millions of comets that collided with Earth during its very early history.

Page 11: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

By 4 billion years ago the early atmosphere had the following composition:

Principle gases:

Carbon dioxide (CO2)

Water vapour (H2O)

Nitrogen(N2)

Minor gases:

Hydrogen (H2)

Hydrogen chloride (HCl)

Sulfur dioxide (SO2)

Note: there was virtually no free oxygen (which makes up about 20% of the modern atmosphere).

Page 12: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Some free Oxygen was produced by dissociation of water in the upper atmosphere due to ultraviolet radiation:

2H2O + ultraviolet rays = 2H2 +O2

Light H2 is lost to space and heavier O2 remains in the atmosphere.

However, the rate at which O2 appears to have

increased could not have been produced by dissociation alone.

Page 13: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Photosynthesis is likely responsible for more rapid production of Oxygen:

CO2 + H2O + light (+ chlorophyll) = (CH2O) + O2

Photosynthesis requires chlorophyll, a complex chemical that is produced by some organisms (e.g., plants).

Page 14: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The oldest organisms that could produce chlorophyll are cyanobacteria: single celled organisms that lacked an organized nucleus and lived in the oceans.

First cyanobacteria appeared about 3.5 billion years ago and were anaerobic (did not require free Oxygen).

Page 15: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

They are very common in rocks younger than about 2.5 billion years old. 

There is strong correlation between O2 levels in the

atmosphere and the development of life, on Earth.

Cyanobacteria began the process of increasing atmospheric Oxygen.

Page 16: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

By 600 million years ago Oxygen levels had almost reached the modern concentration of about 20% of the Earth’s atmosphere.

As Oxygen levels increased as aerobic organisms developed (that used free Oxygen) and these, in turn produced even more Oxygen.

Oxygen levels became high enough to support more complex life, which in turn, produced more oxygen.

Page 17: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The evolution of land plants, resulted in a modest increase in O2.

Permian and Triassic: arid conditions were extensive on land and the abundance of land plants diminished.

O2 levels dropped to below 15%.

Variation in O2 levels over the past 500 million years reflect changes in plant cover on Earth.

Carboniferous: warm, moist, tropical settings predominated on land and land plants thrived.

O2 levels almost doubled.

Page 18: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Climate versus Weather

Weather: the condition of the atmosphere at a particular point in space and time.

Page 19: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Weather changes over short periods of time and is described in terms of:

Air temperature

Air pressure

Humidity

Cloud cover

Precipitation (rain, snow)

Visibility

Wind

Page 20: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Climate: the average weather for a defined region.

Based on long-term, accumulated data derived from weather observations.

Long term average temperature, humidity, cloud cover, etc.

Climate (our perception of long term average weather) generally changes relatively slowly as average conditions change due to some long-term changes in factors that control climate.

Current focus on climate change is on the long term change in global temperature (Global Warming).

Page 21: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Climate Change in North America?

Page 22: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Predicted summer temperature change.

Page 23: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Predicted winter temperature change.

Page 24: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Climate varies with the long term radiative balance:

The balance between incoming solar radiation and radiation emitted back to space from Earth.

Page 25: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

= albedo, reflectivity of a surface (atmosphere or land).

Surface Fresh snow 0.8-0.95

Old snow 0.42-0.70

Sandy soils 0.25-0.45

Clay soils 0.20-0.35

Peat soils 0.05-0.15

The albedo of the atmosphere varies with the amount of cloud cover and the concentration of atmospheric aerosols (solid dust and tiny liquid particles).

Page 26: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

(albedo)

Page 27: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Greenhouse gases: absorb longwave radiation and emit some of it back to the Earth as heat.

Water vapor and CO2 are important greenhouse gas, others include:

Methane Nitrous oxide Chlorofluorocarbons

Page 28: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Overall, there is a balance between incoming energy and energy emitted to space; over the long term they are equal.

Climate changes as any component of the system changes.

Especially:

The amount and distribution of incoming energy from the Sun.

The reflectivity of the Earth (changes in snow cover and atmospheric aerosols).

The concentration of “greenhouse” gases in the atmosphere.

Page 29: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Changes in any of these factors cause an imbalance in the radiative balance and the response is a change in climate.

Radiative Forcing is any change in the average net radiation (incoming minus outgoing) reaching the top of the Earth’s atmosphere.

Positive radiative forcing (outgoing radiation is less than incoming) causes a net increase in global temperature.

Negative radiative forcing (outgoing radiation is more than incoming) causes a net decrease in global temperature.

The temperature of the Earth controls the amount of outgoing radiation:

As temperature increases so does the amount of outgoing radiation.

As temperature decreases so does the amount of outgoing radiation.

Page 30: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

If the amount of incoming radiation is reduced, global temperature drops so that outgoing radiation is reduced to return to a radiative balance.

The current concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere is 370 ppm.

The amount of radiation sent back to space from Earth can be reduced by increasing the concentration of greenhouse gases. More heat remains on Earth, the global temperature increases such that the amount of radiation from Earth to space increases to return to

the radiative balance.

For example:

Page 31: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

22.6% increase

382 ppm

Page 32: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

NorthernHemisphere

GrowingSeason

Page 33: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Short-term variation in climate

In geological terms, “short-term” refers to hundreds to thousands of years.

Variation in greenhouse gases accounts for some variation in global temperature.

Prior to 1800 temperatures were low (known as the Little Ice Age).

Variation in incoming solar radiation also accounts for some of the global temperature change.

Over the past 155 years the Earth’s temperature has increased by 0.8 degrees C.

Page 34: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Why has Earth’s temperature been increasing?

Proportion of Greenhouse Gases (GHG) in the atmosphere.

Carbon dioxide

35%

Methane

88%

Fluorocarbons

10%

Rising GHG concentrations correspond reasonably well with rising temperatures.

Page 36: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Variation in incoming solar radiation also results in a change in the radiative balance and global temperature.

Increased radiation: a positive radiative forcing (Earth becomes warmer).

Decreased radiation: a negative radiative forcing (Earth becomes cooler).

Variation in the amount of solar radiation reaching the top of the atmosphere over two years. 0.2%

Page 37: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Incoming solar radiation varies with an 11 year cycle.

Page 38: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The number of sunspots also varies with an 11 year cycle (9.5 to 11 years, averaging 10.8 years over the last 150 years).

Page 39: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Sunspot activity has an important impact on the amount of radiation that reaches the Earth (and it’s the opposite of what you might think!).

Average diameter of sunspots is about 37,000 km and they are regions on the sun’s surface that are cooler than average (sun’s diameter: 1,390,000 km).

The outer layer of the sun is on average 6,000 degrees Kelvin

Sunspots have an average temperature of about 4,600 degrees Kelvin.

Sunspots form in regions of strong magnetic force intersecting the sun’s surface.

The sun rotates with an average period of 27 days; 30 days at its poles and 24 days at its equator.

Page 40: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Library/SORCE/sorce_03.html

Sunspots are darker, cooler regions on the sun.

faculae

Associated with sunspots are faculae, brighter, hotter regions on the sun.

Overall, the combination of sunspots and faculae result in a net increase in the average solar radiation.

Page 41: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Library/SORCE/sorce_03.html

Overall, the sun is brighter when there are many sunspots.

Page 42: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The most recent sunspot maximum was in 2001 and we are currently in the trough of the cycle.

The solar magnetic field reversed in 2001 and will do so again in 2012 (as it always does at the sunspot maximum).

Page 43: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Since 1710 AD the number of sunspots has been increasing.

From 1650 to 1750 AD there were almost no sunspots and the global temperature was particularly low.

Page 44: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The pattern of increasing global temperature over the past few hundred years corresponds reasonably well with the rise in the number of sunspots.

Page 45: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Variation in Solar Radiation accounts for 71% of the recorded variation in temperature.

Variation in Greenhouse Gases (GHG) accounts for 51% of the recorded variation in temperature.

Combined Solar Radiation and GHG explain 92% of the variation in temperature.

http://www.john-daly.com/forcing/moderr.htm

Page 46: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

57% of the global warming over the last century is attributed to variation in solar radiation.

43% of the global warming over the last century is attributed to variation GHG.

The relative role of greenhouse gases and solar variability is the topic of an ongoing debate.

http://www.john-daly.com/forcing/moderr.htm

Page 47: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The fact is, the Earth is 18,000 years into a “warming trend” that began when the glaciers began to retreat northward.

Page 48: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The CO2 levels are certainly much higher than any timeover the past several hundred thousand years, certainlydue to addition CO2 produced by human activity.

Page 49: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.
Page 50: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The geologic record shows a wide range of variation in global temperature on a variety of scales.

Radiative forcing due to a variety of causes has been postulated for many extreme climatic events.

Long term variation in global temperature

Page 51: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Climate Change Over Geologic Time

Tertiary and Quaternary periods have experienced wide fluctuations over relatively short spans of time with overall cooling towards the present.

The Quaternary is characterized by repeated continental glaciation.

The Cretaceous Period was the warmest time in all of geological history (average global temperature is estimated to have been 20 degrees C).

Page 52: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Over two different spans of time the Earth was much cooler than any other time in geologic history:

The end of the Carboniferous Period.

The end of the Precambrian Eon.

Page 53: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

From the Cretaceous to the present.

Conditions in the Cretaceous:

5 degrees warmer than today (average global temperature = 20 degrees C).

Ice caps were not present.

Sea level was higher than any time in geological history.

Due to melted ice caps and rapid sea floor spreading (twice the modern rate).

Page 54: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Sea levels were so high that over much of the Cretaceous the central portion of North America was occupied by the “North American Interior Seaway”.

Page 55: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Why was the Cretaceous so warm?

A period of Greenhouse Earth.

Rapid rates of seafloor spreading suggest high rates of magma delivery to the Earth’s surface via volcanoes; including large volumes of CO2 that accumulated in the atmosphere.

Elevated CO2 concentrations caused a positive radiative forcing.

Temperatures rose to the level required for outgoing longwave radiation to match incoming solar radiation (same level as today).

Volcanic activity peaked in the mid-Cretaceous and diminished to the present…..resulting in a long period of global cooling.

Page 56: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Climatic fluctuation over theTertiary and Quaternary periods.

Through the Tertiary climate varied from colder to warmer in regular cycles.

Average global temperature was warmer during the Tertiary Period so that continental glaciations did not take place.

By the Pleistocene Epoch average global temperature had been reduced so that cold periods resulted in spreading of ice sheets over the continents on four different occasions.

Page 57: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Glaciers: more-or-less permanent bodies of ice and compacted snow that have reached a thick enough accumulation to flow under their own weight.

Glaciers currently cover 10% of the current Earth’s surface.

Page 58: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The Water Budget

Total Water on Earth 1,360,000,000 km3

Oceans and Seas 1,331,746,800 km3

Glaciers and Ice Sheets 24,000,000 km3

Groundwater 4,000,000 km3

Lakes and Reservoirs 155,000 km3

Soil Moisture 83,000 km3

Vapor in the atmosphere 14,000 km3

Rivers 1,200 km3

Page 59: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The distribution of modern glaciers

Glaciers cover 15,800,000 km2 of the Earth’s surface (almost the area of South America).

Location Area of glaciersKm2

Approximately 97% of glaciers are in regions of high latitude (near the north and south poles).

Remaining 3% of glaciers are at low latitudes but high altitudes.

Page 60: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The elevation above which glaciers will form (i.e., the snowline) depends on local climate.

Southern British Columbia: approximately 1500 metres above sea level.

Central Africa: approximately 5000 metres above sea level.

The glacier ice cap on the top of Mt. Kilimanjiro is expected to disappear between 2010 and 2020 due to global warming as the snowline rises to higher elevations.

Page 61: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Antarctica: snow line is at sea level.

http://users.aber.ac.uk/gwr1/typesoficemasses.htm

Page 62: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

18,000 years ago 32% of the land surface and 30% of the ocean surface were covered by glaciers.

Canadian landscape was shaped by glaciers.

Page 63: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

http://www.csulb.edu/~rodrigue/geog140/lectures/glaciers.html

Page 64: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

18,000 years ago 10 million square kilometres of North America was covered by a continental ice sheet up to 3 km thick.

The centre of greatest ice thickness was near Hudson Bay.

Isostatic subsidence depressed the land surface by approximately 380 metres.

The region has rebounded by about 300 metres and continues to rise at 2 cm/yr.

Page 65: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.
Page 66: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

We currently live in a “glacial period” over whichseveral continental glaciations have taken place.

Sea level rose and fell over each period of glaciation.

Page 67: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Growth of ice sheets has a dramatic impact on sea level.

18,000 years ago during the peak of the last continental glaciation sea level was approximately 140 metres lower than today.

Sea level has been rising since that time but the rate has become progressively slower as the continental glaciers disappeared.

Page 68: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

If all of the ice sheets and glaciers were to melt sea level would rise by an additional 80 metres.

Heavily populated areas worldwide would be flooded by a sea level rise on this scale.

At the glacial maximum 18,000 years ago the shoreline was up to several hundred kilometres offshore of the modern shoreline.

Page 69: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Modern rates of sea level change are known from long term records.

At present sea level is rising by 2 mm per year.

Global warming is expected to cause an increase in the rate of sea level rise:

18 cm above present by 2030 (5.6 mm/yr, average)

44 cm above present by 2070 (6.1 cm per year average)

Page 70: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Animated Earth with changing sea level.(http://earth.rice.edu/mtpe/cryo/cryosphere/topics/ice_age/sealevel.mov)

Page 71: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Disintegration of Modern Ice Sheets

Ice sheets are the most extensive glaciers (>50,000 km2).

Flow outward, from the centre of thickest ice.

x

Ocean

y

IceShelf

A continental ice sheet

Ice sheet

Page 72: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

x y

IceShelf

At the shores of the land mass the ice sheet may flow onto the ocean to form an extensive, floating ice shelf.

Page 73: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Greenland: 80% of total land mass is covered by an ice sheet.

Average thickness 1.5 km, 3 km locally.

Page 74: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Antarctica: Ice sheet covers 13.5 million square kilometres.

Exceeds 4 km in thickness.

Bounded by extensive Ice Shelves; e.g., Ross Ice Shelf: total area of 500,000 km2

Page 75: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Larsen Ice Shelf: a relatively small ice shelf that is breaking up.

Page 76: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Regional temperature has increased by 2.5 degrees C over the past 50 years.

Page 77: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

In February 1995 a major storm initiated the breakup of Larsen A Ice Shelf.

The largest iceberg was 70 km long and 25 km wide.

Page 78: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Hundreds of icebergs 1–2 km in size were liberated by the breakup.

Page 79: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Larsen Ice Shelf continues to break up.

Page 80: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

March 2002 Larsen B disintegrated.

Page 81: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Implications:

Suggests that global warming may lead to breakup of other shelves.

Over the year following the disintegration of Larsen B the glaciers that fed the shelf increased their flow rates from 1.7 m/day to 3.1 m/day (a 250% increase).

Such breakup leads to an increase in the rate of flow of glaciers into the Ocean.

This, in turn, will increase the rate at which sea level rises with global warming.

There is evidence that just such an event took place in the geologic past, when average global temperature was a few degrees warmer, raising sea level by more than 6 metres.

Page 82: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

In March, 2003 Iceberg B-15 broke off the Ross Ice Shelf.

One of the largest icebergs ever seen, it was 300 km long and 40 km wide (11,000 km2).

Page 83: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The Ward Hunt Ice Shelf on the coast of Ellsmere Island (the Arctic’s largest ice shelf) broke up in 2003 due to climatic warming.

                                                                                                    

Page 84: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The Point:

With global warming the ice shelves are breaking up.

This is expected to increase the rate at which glacier ice flows into the world’s oceans.

This will lead to an increase in the rate of sea level rise.

Page 85: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

http://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/fs133-99/gl_vol.html

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Images are from William Haxby at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory

18,000 years ago

Page 88: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Melting of the Western Antarctic Ice Sheet

Page 89: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Melting of the Eastern and Western Antarctic Ice Sheet

Page 90: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

18,000 years ago

Page 91: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Melting of the Western Antarctic Ice Sheet

Page 92: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Melting of the Eastern and Western Antarctic Ice Sheet

Page 93: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

18,000 years ago

Page 94: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Melting of the Western Antarctic Ice Sheet

Page 95: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Melting of the Eastern and Western Antarctic Ice Sheet

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18,000 years ago

Page 97: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Melting of the Western Antarctic Ice Sheet

Page 98: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Melting of the Eastern and Western Antarctic Ice Sheet

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Page 100: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Average global temperature today is 15 degrees C.

Many periods of continental glaciation have taken place over the Earth’s history.

4 glacial periods occurred in recent succession, approximately 100,000 years apart.

Between each glacial period is an interglacial period when conditions are like modern conditions.

Most theories of the continental glaciation involve changes in global climate.

What caused the Pleistocene continental glaciations?

A reduction in temperature by 2 to 4 degrees C may cause the continental ice sheets to extend across the continents.

Page 101: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Over the past 200 years the Earth’s temperature has increased by 0.6 degrees C (little chance of glaciation).

Large volumes of volcanic ash in the upper atmosphere would increase the global albedo and reflect solar radiation back into space and cooling the Earth.

Large asteroid impacts throw dust into the atmosphere, reducing receipt of solar radiation (and result in cooling).

Such events have caused considerable cooling but there is no correlation between continental glaciations and such events.

These mechanisms cannot explain the 100,000 year cycles of glaciation over the recent past.

Past speculation for causes of continental glaciation:

Page 102: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

What appears to be the correct answer to the question of the cause of continental glaciations came from Mulatin Milankovich….

….Milankovich Cycles

Milankovitch conducted a mathematical study of the effect of the Earth’s orbit on climate.

He identified three components of the Earth’s orbit and rotation that would affect climate:

Eccentricity

Obliquity

Precession

Page 103: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Eccentricity: variation in the form of the Earth’s orbit about the sun.

High eccentricity increases differences between seasons, low eccentricity decreases difference between seasons.

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Low eccentricity High eccentricity

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Obliquity: variation in the angle between the axis of rotation of the Earth and the plane of the orbit about the sun.

Influences the difference in sunlight reaching the poles in winter and summer (high angle, more summer sunlight, less winter sunlight).

At present the angle is 23.5 degrees.

Page 106: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Slightly influences amount of sunlight in summer and winter in polar regions.

Precession: a wobble of the Earth’s rotational axis.

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All three components vary in a cyclical manner.

Duration of each cycle:

Eccentricity: 100,000 years

Obliquity: 40,000 years.

Precession: 26,000 years.

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All three cycles are superimposed and cause variation in the distribution of solar radiation over the seasons.

During parts of the cycle:

Mild winters, abundant snow and cool summers.

Cold, dry winters, hot summers.

Glaciers will not develop.

Conducive to development of glaciers.

The 100,000 year cycle of eccentricity has the greatest effect and corresponds to continental glaciations.

Page 110: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

When eccentricity is low widespread glaciation is most likely (more uniform seasons)

Seasonal extremes (hot summers and cold winters) associated with high eccentricity are less likely to see the spread of glaciers.

Once glaciers begin to develop they increase global albedo, reducing incoming solar radiation and causing further cooling of the Earth.

Page 111: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

In the 1970s a means of testing the hypothesis was developed based on the chemistry of shells produced by organisms.

The concentration of certain isotopes that are incorporated into shell material was found to be a function of seawater temperature.

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The correlation between eccentricity and global temperature was striking and supported Milankovich’s ideas.

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Periods with smaller seasonal differences in temperature cause the beginning of glacier advance away from the poles to extend across the continents.

Once the glaciers begin to advance they increase global albedo (reflecting more incoming solar radiation away from the Earth).

This reduces the average global temperature which, in turn, causes the further advance of glaciers.

The glacial advance ends when seasonal differences increase and the glaciers retreat back towards the poles.

Page 114: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Carboniferous/Permian

The Permian Period began with the lowest temperatures of the Phanerozic Eon.

It coincided with a marked decrease in O2 concentration following the peak in the Carboniferous.

Page 115: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

The Permian was a time when all of the major continents were grouped into a “supercontinent” called Pangea.

Much of the land surface was exposed to a very dry, inland climate, much like central Canada or Asia today.

Much of the land surface extended north and south of the equator, in climatic zones that experience desert-like conditions.

Page 116: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Extensive arid conditions reduced plant life which, in turn, led to a reduction in atmospheric O2.

With the widespread, arid land mass, continental weathering of existing rocks took place at a greater rate than in the past.

Weathering of rocks can remove CO2 from the atomosphere:

Carbonic acid is important for several weathering reactions.

Page 117: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

E.g., weathering of limestone (made up of the mineral Calcite)

The end result is the loss of CO2 from the atmosphere.

Lower CO2 results in a negative radiative forcing and global temperature falls.

The subsequent increase in temperature was likely due to increased volcanic activity that continued through to the Cretaceous.

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Snowball Earth

An excellent article is located at Paul Hoffman’s site at: http://www-eps.harvard.edu/people/faculty/hoffman/snowball_paper.html

Hypothesis: That 600-700 million years ago the Earth was effectively covered by glacial ice, including 500 to 1500 m thick sea ice cover.

Evidence: Glacial deposits (e.g., Tillite….the rock form of Till) that were laid down at low latitudes, apparently at the equator and near sea level on several continental masses of the same age.

Page 119: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

Tillite: a sedimentary rock that is made up of a wide range of sizes of materials…ranging from fine mud to huge boulders.

Such deposits are laid down from retreating glaciers.

Page 120: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

How do we know the latitude of ancient tillites?

By measuring the magnetic inclination of the weak magnetic field associated with the deposits.

Near horizontal inclination indicates deposition near the equator.

There was considerable skepticism that these were glacial deposits because it seemed impossible for glaciation to proceed all the way to the equator.

Page 121: The Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate The history of the atmosphere. What controls Earth’s climate? How has climate changed in the past? Cretaceous to the.

 Mikhail Budyko (USSR) undertook climatological modeling to determine whether or not a condition could exist that would cause glaciers to extend to sea level at the Equator.

How would such glaciation come to be?

Based on a climatic energy balance. Simplest case:

 

Net Energy Reaching Earth =

incoming radiation (I) – reflected radiation ( x I)

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Important factors:

Albedo: The higher the global albedo the more incoming radiation is reflected and the less is absorbed to warm the Earth.

Greenhouse gases: The more greenhouse gases are in the atmosphere, the more heat is retained (temperatures rise).

Budyko found that as glaciers advance southward from the poles that global albedo increases, cooling the Earth and enhancing formation of glaciers.

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Such freezing of the Earth would drastically reduce the amount of water vapor, reducing the greenhouse effect even further, causing even further cooling.

If sea ice and glaciers come to extend to within 30 degrees North or South of the Equator then global albedo becomes high enough so that the glaciers will proceed to cover the Earth to the equator (forming a Snowball Earth).

What would cause such a glaciation 700 million years ago?

1. Sun’s energy was 6% less than today (less incoming heat).

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 2. With the evolution of algae CO2 uptake by photosynthesis may have decreased the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere: lessening Greenhouse Effect.

But, if this were to ever had taken place, why does the Earth not continue to be a snowball?

Joe Kirschvink: Found a possible cause of the destruction of such global glaciers.

Even with a cover of ice plate tectonics will continue to be active.

Volcanism would continue to add gases to the Earth’s atmosphere, including CO2.

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Over time, the CO2 concentration would increase at a constant

rate.

CO2 would not be lost to weathering and the formation of

carbonate rocks (ice covered continents don’t weather).

It would take 10 million to 40 million years for sufficient CO2

to accumulate to the required levels.

Average global temperatures would rise to almost 50 degrees Celsius and it would take only a few thousand years for sea ice to melt….reducing the global albedo.

To melt the glaciers and sea ice, given the high albedo, would require 350 times as much CO2 as there is in the current

atmosphere.

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