copyright 2011 image credit: psammophile. copyright 2011 it would be hard to miss all the recent...

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Copyright 2011

Image Credit: psammophile

Copyright 2011

It would be hard to miss all the recent news about global climate change, unless maybe you

were living on another planet

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And even then, if you had a good view of Earth, from a satellite or another planet, you

might notice that something was going on . . .

Animation Credit: NASA

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Photo Credits: Permafrost – Unite Us (University of Alaska); Seiner – Public Domain; Humboldt Squid – NOAA, public domain

Thawing Permafros

t

Changes in Alaska’s Fisheries

¿Estoy en México?

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Thousands of Walruses Crowding Onto Arctic

Beaches

Photos & Video: U.S. Geological Survey

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What do scientists think is causing these

changes?

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INCREASED GREENHOUSE EFFECT

Greenhouse gases: carbon dioxide, methane, water vapor

Burning of fossil fuelsClearing of vegetationIncreased amounts of sun’s heat trapped

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Global Average Temperature and Carbon Dioxide Concentrations, 1880-2006

Global Temperatures CO2 (Mauna Loa)

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How much warming is from human

activity and how much from Earth’s

natural cycles?

Were there other warm climate periods during

Earth’s long history?

How can scientists study Earth’s

prehistoric climate patterns if there were no humans around to collect

data?

But there are still many questions to investigate

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At most, our direct scientific measurements of temperature, carbon

dioxide levels, etc., extend back only about 1½ to 2 centuries before

the present!

How can we go back in time to investigate prehistoric climate

changes?

Time for Climate

Detectives!

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OBJECTIVE

Investigate how modern and ancient living

organisms and their adaptations provide clues to Earth’s climate history and processes that have affected Earth’s past &

present climate

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OBJECTIVE

Analyze fossil indicators to determine past climate

trends and their changes in ancient atmosphere, ocean, and land-based

systems.

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OBJECTIVE

Experience how different scientific disciplines (e.g.,

geology, biology, oceanography) are interconnected in

conducting climate research

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A fossil indicator is a type of proxy data,

a special indirect clue about climate conditions when

direct measurements are not available

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And Earth’s prehistoric climate history,

reconstructed from fossils and other proxy data, is called palaeoclimate