Professional Documents
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Background
Humans are only able to live on Earth because of a "greenhouse effect." Without this our world would have
been too cold for life to have colonized the surface of the planet. Life subsequently "terraformed" Earth: living
organisms, cyanobacteria or blue-green algae, "made" the oxygen we humans need to survive. Life today is
the product of changes in Earth's atmosphere caused by ancient life. Climate change is natural and real:
without it we would not exist. But all this happened over millions and millions of years. Climate change today
is also real, but it's happening during our lifetime and many experts consider our way of life
industrialization and the use of fossil fuels to be the primary cause. In order to understand the present
climate and what may be ahead, scientists are collecting information stored in rocks, ice, and sediment to
understand Earth's climate history. They are taking the ocean's temperature and measuring the extent of seaice cover. They are probing beneath thick glaciers and drilling through multi-million year old ice sheets. They
are recording carbon dioxide and methane levels. And most of this exploration and research is happening in
the polar regions. In terms of global climate change, the Poles turn out to be more sensitive than anywhere
else on Earth. Climate change, in a sense, begins at the ends
our planet.
Investigate/Explain
Materials:
Procedure:
Discussion:
Why did the level of water change? This is the important biochemistry question what
are the physical properties of water which lead to its thermal expansion?
What does this experiment suggest might occur if the oceans warm? Consider the
possible impacts of sea-level rise in low-lying coastal areas such as Bangladesh or South
Florida or Rotterdam, even Guayaquil.
If global warming is not sufficient to cause significant snow and ice melt, would you
expect this thermal expansion to be enough to cause coastal flooding and erosion
problems?
Which would you expect to have a greater effect on sea level the melting of Arctic
sea-ice, the Greenland ice cap, or ice sheets in the Antarctic? (This is a bit of a trick
question: the melting of sea-ice has no effect on sea levels, except in "uncorking" glaciers
and ice streams which then can flow more easily down into the ocean. It's dynamic ice
sheets such as that in Greenland and in West Antarctica that could, potentially, have a
major impact on sea level. East Antarctica, for now, seems relatively stable, and actually
seems to be gaining ice.)
John Osborne
September 2015