meteorology and civilization ii
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Meteorology and Civilization II. November 14. 2007. Mesopotamia. Westerlies brought precipitation from the Mediterranean Precipitation was high enough to support dry-land farming Marginal area Drier hotter lands to the south were irrigated Laborers paid in food. Tell Leilan. Akkadian city - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Meteorology and Civilization II
November 14. 2007
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Mesopotamia
• Westerlies brought precipitation from the Mediterranean
• Precipitation was high enough to support dry-land farming
• Marginal area
• Drier hotter lands to the south were irrigated
• Laborers paid in food
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Tell Leilan• Akkadian city
• Abandoned abruptly around 2200 BC
• Summer rain-bearing winds replaced by hot, dry winds from the north
• Precipitation dropped by 30%
• Strong winds blew away topsoil
• Crops failed, infant mortality increased
• Citizens moved south where irrigation infrastructure in place, or became pastoral nomads
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2200 BC
• Indus Valley in decline• Nile River decreased flow – end of Old
Kingdom• Amazon suffered the worst drought in
17,000 years• Drought recorded in Ireland, Great Plains• Caused by volcano? Cooling North
Atlantic cuts precipitation in Middle East in half
• Century-long drought
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Dust Bowl
• If centuries long drought occurred today, implications?
• Dust Bowl lasted 6 years
• 3.5 million people relocated
• Impacted 5 million square miles
• Thousands of people and livestock died of starvation and respiratory ailments
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536 AD
• Proxy data indicates cooling in western and northern Europe, China, and Korea and drought in Peru, East Africa, India, China, and Korea
• Not caused by climate cycle
• Caused by volcano or comet
• Plague increased when populations of gerbils, mice, and rats increased in Africa
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536 AD
• Collapse of Bantu people in Congo Basin
• Bantu spent hundreds of years clearing the forest – poor soils
• The climate change of 536 dried the remaining forest
• Rapid desiccation of vegetation
• Agriculture may have allowed plague to enter the Congo
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Plague• When climate changes, animals must
adapt• The ones that adapt the fastest are those
with the shortest generations and most offspring– Microbes, cockroaches, rats, weeds
• If climate changes produce more food, populations expand rapidly
• If climate change produces less food, masses of offspring and short generations allows rapid adaptation
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Plague
• Recent winners in global warming include R-strategists– bark beetles
• Warmer winters allow them to produce 2 generations a year
• They also move farther north and higher altitudes
• Spread to species that have no history of dealing with them
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Plague
• Mosquitoes moving to higher latitudes and altitudes
• Bringing yellow fever and dengue fever to new populations
• Hantavirus spread when El Nino-related floods increased the food supply of deer mice and drove them inside
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Maya• Survived 1200 years in area with little
topsoil, little water, and hurricanes
• Cities built far removed from water sources
• When one civilization falls, another usually replaces it on the same spot – not so in this case
• Proxy data points to drought
• Maya elite used reservoirs to maintain power
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Georgia Drought
• Expected to expand into southeastern Georgia by next summer
• Water reserves will be depleted by Spring 2008
• Implications?– Soil microbes– Fires– erosion
• La Nina expected in strengthen drought
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Weak, Moderate & Strong La Nina Impacts on Winter Precipitation
La Nina Average Nov-Feb precip
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5.00
10.00
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20.00
25.00
30.00
Station
Pre
cip
(in
) All years
Weak La Nina
Moderate La Nina
Strong La Nina
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Weak, Moderate & Strong La Nina Impacts on Spring Precipitation
March-May La Nina average precip
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2.00
4.00
6.00
8.00
10.00
12.00
14.00
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18.00
Station
Pre
cip
(in
)
MM all
MM WL
MM ML
MM SL