1 / 10

EOSC 112: THE FLUID EARTH

EOSC 112: THE FLUID EARTH. Atm4 Read: Kump et al. Chap.4, p. 68-80 Check: Rev. Ques. 1-6, 12; Problem: 2 Why do weather / climate vary around the globe? Why is the response to a global climate perturbation not necessarily uniform around the globe? Objectives:

jtroutman
Download Presentation

EOSC 112: THE FLUID EARTH

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EOSC 112: THE FLUID EARTH • Atm4 Read: Kump et al. Chap.4, p. 68-80 • Check: Rev. Ques. 1-6, 12; Problem: 2 • Why do weather / climate vary around the globe? • Why is the response to a global climate perturbation not necessarily uniform around the globe? • Objectives: • To describe the global distribution of T and rainfall; • To describe the hydrological cycle. TEMPERATURE AND RAINFALL EOSC 112 lecture Atm-5

  2. 1. Mean air temperature at sea level (January) • Wind patterns affect distribution of T (e.g. wave-like aspect of isotherms) EOSC 112 lecture Atm-5

  3. Mean air temperature at sea level (July) • Cool Californian Current => cools adjacent land • Hottest regions at ~20°-30° (not at Eq.) • High P, subsiding air, clear sky, low humidity => hot deserts EOSC 112 lecture Atm-5

  4. Annual T range • Largest T range over land. EOSC 112 lecture Atm-5

  5. Temp. records • High T records: • World: El Azizia, Libya (32°N) 58°C, in 1922 • Western Hem.: Death Valley, CA (36°N) 57°C • Canada: Midale, SK (49°N) 45°C • Low T record: • World: Vostok, Antarctica (78°S) -89°C, 1983 • N.Hem.: Verkhoyansk, Russia (67°N) -68°C • N.America: Snag, Yukon (62°N) -63°C. EOSC 112 lecture Atm-5

  6. Mean annual precipitation • Driest regions near 30° and poles: high P, subsiding air. EOSC 112 lecture Atm-5

  7. Meridional cells & precipitation • Northward shift of cells during summer & southward shift during winter => precip. changes EOSC 112 lecture Atm-5

  8. Additional comments • Dry “rain shadow” past mountain ranges • e.g. east of Rockies, Andes • Interior of continents far from oceans: drier • Cold coastal currents => less evaporation & cool air => less convection & precipitation over adjacent land. • e.g. Baja California in Mexico, or • Namib Desert along SW Africa. EOSC 112 lecture Atm-5

  9. 2. Hydrological Cycle • Water: 97.5% in ocean, 2.5% on land, 0.001% in atmosphere • Water on land: • 3/4 in polar ice sheets. • Greenland ice sheet melted => 6m global sea level (SL) rise • Antarctic ice sheet melted => 60m SL rise • Some in glaciers, ground water • < 1% in lakes, rivers, soils. EOSC 112 lecture Atm-5

  10. EOSC 112 lecture Atm-5

More Related