solar system astronomy earth lecture 2

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Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2 Earth’s Interior, Plate tectonics, Climate, Atmosphere, Global warming

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Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2. Earth’s Interior, Plate tectonics, Climate, Atmosphere, Global warming. Overview of Earth’s Interior. Interior Temperature Increases with Depth. Earth’s Magnetic Field. Current position of N magnetic pole. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Solar System AstronomyEarth Lecture 2

Earth’s Interior, Plate tectonics, Climate, Atmosphere, Global

warming

Page 2: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Overview of Earth’s Interior

Page 3: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Interior Temperature Increases with Depth

Page 4: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Earth’s Magnetic Field

Current position of N magnetic pole

Page 5: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Motion of Magnetic poles

North magnetic pole is now moving N about 15 km/yr

1000 km

Daily Magnetic pole motion

100 km

Sir John Ross (1831) first discovered N magnetic pole while exploring the Arctic. He was trapped in the polar ice for 4 years (!) and made magnetic observations to

pass the time.

Page 7: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

University of Iowa VIS Auroral Imager Instrument

Page 8: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Auroral Imaging movie from Polar VIS Instrument

Page 9: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Plate Tectonics

Page 10: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Continental DriftNorth American plate moves 50 cm per year

Page 11: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Continental drift:

Historical Maps

Page 12: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Movie of Continental Drift

Time (Myr)

Page 13: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Alfred Wegener and Continental Drift: Embattled Scientist

A. Wegener (1880-1930)

Wegener first proposed continental drift theory in 1915. It was soundly rejected, and only became accepted after his death

Page 14: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Earthquake zones vs. Tectonic Plates

Page 15: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Principle of the Seismograph

Page 16: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

San Andreas Fault

The San Andreas Fault is a transform fault margin that separates the Pacific plate from the North American plate. Directions of motion are shown by the arrows. Los Angeles, on the Pacific plate, is moving north, while San Francisco is moving south, bringing the two cities closer together at a speed of 5.5 cm/y; they will be adjacent about 10 million years in the future.

Page 17: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Locating an earthquake epicenter using seismic waves

Page 18: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Seismic Risk Map of U.S.

Note: This map does not indicate frequency of earthquakes

Page 19: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Earth’s atmospheric gases

Earth at early epochs had 500-1000x (15%-30%) CO2 than current levels (0.03%)

Page 20: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Transmission of atmosphere versus wavelength

Ozone blocks harmful UV: skin cancersCO2 blocks

IR: global warming

Infrared Visible Ultraviolet

Page 21: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

UV Protection from

Atmospheric Oxygen Isotopes

Page 22: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Greenhouse effect

Page 23: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Comparison of Greenhouse effect on terrestrial planets

Page 24: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration 1950-2000

Page 25: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Atmospheric C02 versus CO2 emission from fossil fuels

Page 26: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Global land temperature 1860-1997

From the late 1860s to the early 1940s, the annual mean temperature rose about 0.6 degrees C. From the early 1940s to 1965 the temperature declined about 0.2 degrees C and since 1965 the trend has been upward. The overall rise during the century and a quarter of record is ca. 0.85 degrees C. The decade of the 1990’s has been the warmest on record

Page 27: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Future Effects of global warming by CO2

Page 28: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Predicted global temperature increase for doubling CO2

Northern hemisphere Winter (C)Northern hemisphere Summer (C)

Page 29: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Model of Precipitation Changes caused by doubling CO2 concentration

Page 30: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Long-term global temperature variations

Variations in the oxygen-isotope ratio through the Greenland Ice Sheet. The zone of strongly negative values beginning about 70,000 years ago and ending about 10,000 years represents the last glaciation. The pronounced shift in values about 10,000 years ago marks an abrupt change from glacial to interglacial climate at the end of the glaciation.

Page 31: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Glaciation Cycles Measured by

Oxygen Isotope ratios

Curve of average oxygen-isotope variations during the last 2 million years based on analyses of deep-sea sediment cores. The curve illustrates changing global ice volume during successive glacial-interglacial cycles of the Quaternary Period

Page 32: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

North America during last glaciation (10,000 BCE)

Des Moines lobe

Page 33: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Europe during last glaciation(20000 BCE -10000 BCE)

Page 34: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Affect of glaciation on trees species

Simplified pollen diagram prepared from data collected at Rogers Lake, Connecticut. Variations in pollen influx are plotted as a function of time, and show progressive changes in forest composition.

Page 35: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Greenland ice core acidity records of Volcanic eruptions

Acidity record from a Greenland ice core showing peaks in sulphuric-acid precipitation attributable to major volcanic eruptions. The largest acid peak dates to 1815-1816, the time of the huge Tambora eruption in the East Indies, which produced "the year without a summer" (1816). The volcanic dust and gases in the stratosphere reduced northern hemisphere temperatures at least 0.7 degrees C.

Page 36: Solar System Astronomy Earth Lecture 2

Effects of volcanic eruptions on global temperature

My. Pinatubo eruption June, 1991 (Phillipines)