climate change: from dinosaurs to the grandchildren bob marsh

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Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh QuickTime™ and a TIFF (LZW) decompressor are needed to see this picture.

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Page 1: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren

Bob Marsh

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Page 2: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

Climate changes …

… on all timescales …

increasingly rare snow on Beachy Head (27/12/05)

Chalk strata - laid down in warm shallow seas (89-93 million years ago)

Page 3: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

The Last 25 years:

El Niño (December 1997)

La Niña (December 2000)

Arizona floods

(El Niño,82/83)

Yellowstone fires

(La Niña, 88)Pinatubo erupts (1991)

Tanzania drought

(recent El Niño)

Pacific Sea Surface Temperature

Changes:

Page 4: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

The Last 150 years:

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”Coalbrookdale by Night”(P. de Loutherbourg, 1801)

US Interstate Highway I5, north of Los

Angeles

Late Victorian Industry

Page 5: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

The Last 2000 years:

“Dark Ages” (600-1000 AD) triggered by major volcanic eruption in 535 AD? Good Medieval Harvests “Scene on the Ice” (H. Avercamp, c. 1600)

From tree rings …… to modern observations

Page 6: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

The Last 12,000 years:“The Seven Wonders of the World”

(spanning 2650 - 247 BC)

“Green Sahara”& Middle East

helps…

Precipitation change, 6500 BC

… rise of agriculture & civilization in the “Fertile Crescent”

(9000-7000 BC), leading to …

Page 7: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

The Last 50,000 years:Retreat of the North American ice

sheet, 18,000-8,000 years ago:

Ice Age Megafauna, now extinct:

Irish ElkWooly Mammoth

Retreat of ice sheets and sea ice in the Atlantic/European sector:

Page 8: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

The Last 450,000 years:

Drilling Antarctic ice cores:

& deep ocean sediment cores:

Part of the EPICA ice core Analysing a sediment core

Page 9: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

The Last 5,500,000 years:

“Messinian salinity crisis”(Mediterranean Sea almost dries up, c. 6 Ma)

Early humans disperse from Africa (0.5-1.9 million yrs ago)

Page 10: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

The Last 65,000,000 years:

Dinosaur extinction linked to asteroid impact & climate changes (c. 65 Ma)

India drifts north, collides with Tibet, Himalayas built, climate changes …

Page 11: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

The Last 540,000,000 years:

Carboniferous Forest (c. 300 Ma)

Cambrian Ocean Life(c. 500 Ma)

Early PaleoceneForest (c. 60 Ma)

Late Carboniferous World(306 Ma) - a COLD world

Late Cretaceous World(94 Ma) - a HOT world

Page 12: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

So why does climate change so much & in so

many different ways?

Let’s look at some causes…

Time

Time

Page 13: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

“Astronomical Changes”- in Earth’s orbit around the Sun- in the tilt & wobble of our axis

• Caused glacial cycles over the last million years• Ice Ages principally a response to changes in orbit/axis• Amplified through “positive feedbacks”, changing ice sheets, vegetation & CO2

Earth’s tilt & the seasons

Earth’s orbit around the Sun

Earth’s tilt & the seasons

Page 14: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

Recent changes in the Sun (“Solar Irradiance”)

• Modern observations confirm that Solar Irradiance varies with the no. of sunspots

• The Little Ice Age in Europe coincided with the “Maunder Minimum” of sunspots

• Some (not much) recent global warming due to recent increase in Solar Irradiance

Sunspots seen in visible light (left) & ultraviolet light (right) light

Page 15: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

CO2 variations: recent & past

Past 50 years: Past 400,000 years:

• directly measured in air sampled in clean places• steadily rising, rate accelerated recently

• measured in air trapped in ice cores• follows glacial cycles

Earth has a natural carbon cycle which humans are altering

Earth’s climate is sensitive to CO2 due to the Greenhouse Effect

Page 16: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

So is recent climate change natural?

Page 17: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

… or have we influenced it?

Page 18: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

Big changes indeed seem underway - best seen in recent changes of ice sheets & glaciers

collapse of the Larsen BIce Sheet (West Antarctica)in February 2002

rapid retreat Alaskan glaciers

over the last 60 years

Page 19: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

So what about the Next 100 years?

• from IPCC 4th Assessment “Summary for Policymakers” (February 2007)• range of warming (1.1 to 6.4°C warming) due to range of emissions policy

Page 20: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

Future “global” warming varies much by region:

• from IPCC 4th Assessment “Summary for Policymakers” (February 2007)• land warms much more than ocean, most dramatically towards North Pole

Page 21: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

But despite increasingly certain predictions of climate

change over 21st century, due to human activities …

… we still struggle to forecast the details because of less

predictable natural factors …

Page 22: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

North Atlantic Surface Pressure: Midnight Sun/Mon

Weather forecasts for several days ahead are now highly accurate

e.g., last Monday’s big storm in the south …

Page 23: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

… came with a reliable 2-day warning

Same pattern forecast 2 days beforehand

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1200 Mon0100 Sun 2100 Sun 0300 Mon

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1100 Sun

Page 24: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

But looking further ahead, seasonal climate forecasts are often quite wrong!

e.g., Summer 2007 rainfall forecast (2 months ahead)

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- expected average rainfall in most of the UK- was actually much wetter in the midlands/south

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Page 25: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

Although temperature is easier to forecast …

Summer 2008 “early” forecast:

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- extensive coolness expected in tropics (La Niña)- but expect a warm summer in UK, like 2003?

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Page 26: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

Role of the World Ocean in Climate Change

• Total Ocean Net Heating = 84% of Total Earth System Warming over 1955-1998

• Absorbs about 25% of human emissions of CO2 over the last 150 years (mainly in North Atlantic & Southern Ocean) 1955-2003 linear trend in Ocean Heat Content

(Levitus et al. 2005)

Warming of upper 750m, 1993-2003(Jim Hansen, NASA/GISS)

Anthropogenic CO2 in the World Ocean(Sabine et al. 2004)

Page 27: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

Role of the Ocean in Recent Climate Extremes

Atlantic surface temperature anomalies August 2003relative to August average over 1985-2003

• Pattern is a combination of Global Warming & slowly-changing natural cycle in the Atlantic (recently warm)

• Such regional warming partly responsible for recent heatwaves (e.g., Summer 2003 in the UK)

European heatwave, 2003

Page 28: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

Global & Local Sea-Level Rise: latest measurements from space

• Satellites have provided accurate global coverage since 1992• Rate of global-mean sea-level rise recently about 3 mm per year• But lots of local variations, with fastest rises in the west Pacific & North Atlantic

TOPEX/Poseiden satellite(launched 1992)

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Geographic variations in sea-level rise over 1993-2005 (updated from Cazenave & Nerem 2004)

Changes in global-mean sea-level rise since 1992

Page 29: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

Role of the Ocean Circulation

• The World Ocean is connected by a global “Conveyor Belt” circulation• Helps carry heat, salt, carbon (plus bottles & ducks) around our planet

• The Conveyor Belt seems to have changed rapidly in the past, and may do so again in the future as CO2 levels rise

Page 30: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

What NOCS is doing about climate change- to observe & understand what is happening

“Argo” floats measuring the oceans (since 1999)RRS Discovery

RRS James Cook

We deploy Argo floats from our research ships:

- Contributing to an international effort to populate the World Ocean with Argo floats

- Monitoring oceanic changes in heat and freshwater associated with climate change

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Page 31: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

Summary Our Climate …varies from seasons to eons, from gardens to globesometimes abruptly (and a lot!) through changes in the Sun, Earth (orbit/spin),

volcanoes, vegetation, atmospheric gases … is hard to confidently forecast, even a season aheadbut is almost certainly being changed by us …

The Oceans play a major part in climate and climate change …

by absorbing excess heatby absorbing excess CO2 (and acidifying …)by dominating longer-term variations (e.g. El Niño)by dominating particular regions, especially ours …

Page 32: Climate Change: From Dinosaurs to the Grandchildren Bob Marsh

Thank You for listening!