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Climatologists give waterworld warning for Earth
New Scientist Print Edition ^ | April 26, 2003 | Nicola Jones

Posted on 04/26/2003 8:39:14 PM PDT by PeaceBeWithYou

As the world gets warmer, it is getting wetter. And one of the main conclusions reached at Europe's largest ever earth sciences conference was that we are less prepared for it than ever.

While some delegates were still reeling from the catastrophic floods that hit the continent in August 2002, others warned that the risk of future flooding has been vastly underestimated. And studies of past episodes of climate change suggest that a wetter world may be not only a consequence of global warming but a trigger for further, more dramatic temperature rises.

The first task was to take stock, in a session devoted to analysing last summer's floods. Most agreed the event was a freak of nature - an unfortunate and unpredictable convergence of events. A cyclone disappeared and then reappeared over central Europe, taking everyone by surprise.

It was followed a couple of days later by a second more powerful cyclone that was halted by a region of high pressure, causing it to dump its huge load of rain over a relatively small area. "It was like a perfect storm," says Jirí Stehlík from Prague's Czech Hydrometeorological Institute.

The floods hit hardest in the Czech Republic, where 15 people died and 220,000 were evacuated. In Prague a flood this severe would normally be expected only once every 500 years; in the south of the country it was a once-in-1000-year event, and some areas received half their expected annual rainfall in just four days.

Freak of nature or not, the disaster was an ominous warning of the kind of events likely to be triggered as global temperatures rise. And they could happen more often than we thought, according to Richard Betts from Britain's Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research in Berkshire. He warned colleagues at the meeting that they have been underestimating the risk of future flooding.

Current models of how climate change will affect average rainfall only take account of the ability of air to hold more water as it gets warmer. This means there will be more evaporation in a warmer world, and therefore more rainfall. This alone would increase river flows worldwide by about one per cent by 2100, making rivers more likely to burst their banks.

But that picture ignores the effects of greenhouse gases on plants, Betts pointed out. In response to high levels of carbon dioxide, plants shrink their stomata - the holes in the surface of their leaves through which gases pass in and out. This drastically reduces water loss from the plants, leaving more water in the soil.

When Betts included these changes in his models of groundwater levels, he found the effect could increase groundwater by 10 per cent over the next century - 10 times as much as global warming alone. A region of central Africa covering part of the Democratic Republic of Congo was one of the worst-affected locations, with soils in the area dealing with an extra six centimetres of water a year.

When wetlands ruled the world

Delegates in sessions devoted to past episodes of climate change also talked about the implications of rising rainfall - and whether it could be a trigger for rapid warming, not just a consequence. One of the liveliest debates concerned the most dramatic changes in the Earth's climate: steep jumps in temperature that can occur in a matter of decades as ice ages draw to a close. Understanding how and why these swings happened is critical to working out whether we are now at risk of triggering something similar.

One popular explanation is that slight initial temperature changes cause a sudden release of vast amounts of the greenhouse gas methane held frozen beneath the seabed in a form known as a gas hydrate. But Mark Maslin from University College London shook things up by suggesting that wetlands were to blame - at least for the most recent rapid warming event, after the last ice age about 18,000 years ago.

His theory came about as a way to settle an argument between oceanographers and land-based palaeontologists. From computer models of plant growth, land-based researchers calculate that about 1000 gigatonnes of carbon has been added to land since the last ice age. This all comes from CO2 in the sea, transferred via the atmosphere.

But oceanographers looking at marine sediments reckon only 500 gigatonnes of carbon has been lost from the ocean. They work this out by measuring the relative amounts of carbon-12 and carbon-13 isotopes in the water over time. Plants preferentially use carbon-12, so the more carbon they take up, the higher the proportion of carbon-13 left in the sea.

Maslin says this overlooks the fact that a blast of methane hydrate would add a dose of carbon-12 to the water. So the ocean could have lost more carbon-13 to the land than previously realised. He calculates that the release of 120 gigatonnes of methane hydrate would reconcile the oceanographers' and palaeontologists' results.

But that is only one-third of the amount of methane that ice cores dating from the time show flooded the atmosphere. So hydrates cannot have been the main cause of the warming: most of the methane must have come from somewhere else, says Maslin. He points to marshes and wetlands as the most likely source, as bacteria in these swamps are a major source of methane.

If an initial nudge in climate made the world wetter, that could have extended wetlands and triggered further, rapid warming. There is separate evidence that the amount of water flowing from the Amazon wetlands nearly doubled during this period, he points out.

Frozen in time

Teams drilling deep into Antarctic ice are working hard to resolve the question. While marine sediments show roughly how global temperatures changed in the past, the gases trapped in bubbles in ancient ice reveal the make-up of the atmosphere, and will help reveal what caused the changes.

Drilling back in time

So far, periods of dramatic warming have been seen in Greenland ice, but not at the South Pole. A core currently being drilled in Dronning Maud Land (see map) should confirm whether warming affected the entire planet with equal severity, and show how the timing of the methane increases relates to the temperature changes.

The core has a good chance of doing this, as the high snowfall rate at the site makes it possible to pick out individual years. The first half of the core, going back to 50,000 years ago, arrived in Germany in April and is sitting in the freezer waiting to be studied.

The same team is also drilling a core at Dome Concordia in Antarctica, which reaches back even further in time to a period 800,000 years ago when the climate wobbled between warm spells and ice ages twice as fast as it does today. In January, the team reached a depth of 3201 metres, corresponding to 950,000 years ago, smashing the record for the deepest ever core.

Sadly, the outlook for climatologists interested in the present day was not so hopeful. As they unravel the role of water and wetlands in setting the course that global warming will take, it is becoming increasingly clear that the data on river flow and rainfall which they plug into their models (and which can be used to predict imminent floods) is getting worse, not better.

Murugesu Sivapalan, a hydrologist from the University of Western Australia, reported to the conference that river and rain gauges have been the first casualties of cuts to water management budgets. He says there are now only 2000 working gauges in Africa, half the number 25 years ago, and that numbers are also falling in Europe, Australia and Japan. "Flood risk is increasing," he says. "Clearly our tools are no longer adequate to deal with that."

The EGS-AGU-EUG Joint Assembly took place in Nice, France, from 7 to 11 April


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: alarmist; environment; feartheweather; fud; globalwarming; globalwarminghoax; scaretactics; waterworld
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To: PeaceBeWithYou
Plumber wanted in Antarctic

GREAT!

Can I bring my all-mode HF radio, a 2KW linear and a BIG hunk of wire?

41 posted on 04/26/2003 9:55:25 PM PDT by _Jim (Guangdong doctor linked as source of SARS in China: http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20030320/09/)
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To: Calvin Locke
She is one of the persons who are expected to drop out of public view in a few weeks. No Planet X, no career. Still, she is riding this right to the last.
42 posted on 04/26/2003 9:59:01 PM PDT by RightWhale (Theorems link concepts; proofs establish links)
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To: _Jim
Can I bring my all-mode HF radio, a 2KW linear and a BIG hunk of wire?

Sure! Just don't mention the 3KW generator and its 18-month supply of fossil fuel, I think the greenies might have a slight problem with them.

43 posted on 04/26/2003 10:02:58 PM PDT by PeaceBeWithYou (De Oppresso Liber!)
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To: PeaceBeWithYou
Blah Blah Blah Blah Blah...yadda yadda yadda...warming...yadda...yadda ice age coming...yadda...blah blah blah...death and destruction...yadda...yadda...end is near...yadda blah blah blah
44 posted on 04/26/2003 10:04:42 PM PDT by Lucas1
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To: Arkinsaw
"Is this going to happen before or after the asteroid hits and the poles switch places?"

I'm betting on the asteroid.

45 posted on 04/26/2003 10:09:25 PM PDT by blam
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To: PeaceBeWithYou
Blah blah blah blah global warming blah blah blah blah
blah ice age blah blah blah Kyoto
46 posted on 04/26/2003 10:10:41 PM PDT by Cheapskate
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To: RightWhale
Staffing a science station on Mars will take a lot of that kind of personality, and there won't be any emergency evacuation if someone gets the heebie-jeebies.

the astronauts(and cosmonauts)will be very busy,studying the artifacts found near the surface,

47 posted on 04/26/2003 10:12:26 PM PDT by green team 1999
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To: PeaceBeWithYou
Yep, and how long before the next prediction that the world is facing severe drought?
48 posted on 04/26/2003 10:12:39 PM PDT by AmericanVictory
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To: AmericanVictory
Yep, and how long before the next prediction that the world is facing severe drought?

Post 22

49 posted on 04/26/2003 10:16:20 PM PDT by PeaceBeWithYou (De Oppresso Liber!)
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To: PeaceBeWithYou; *Global Warming Hoax; Stand Watch Listen; RightWhale; Free the USA; Carry_Okie; ...
ROFL!!

Global Warming Hoax :

To find all articles tagged or indexed using Global Warming Hoax , click below:
  click here >>> Global Warming Hoax <<< click here  
(To view all FR Bump Lists, click here)



50 posted on 04/26/2003 10:17:22 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach (Where is Saddam? and where is Tom Daschle?)
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To: Lucas1
OOOPS sorry bout that , i got distracted in preview mode and forgot to check back till after i posted
51 posted on 04/26/2003 10:17:32 PM PDT by Cheapskate
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To: PeaceBeWithYou

As the world gets warmer, it is getting wetter. And one of the main conclusions reached at Europe's largest ever earth sciences conference was that we are less prepared for it than ever.

 

Mankind's impact is only 0.28% of Total Greenhouse effect

" There is no dispute at all about the fact that even if punctiliously observed, (the Kyoto Protocol) would have an imperceptible effect on future temperatures -- one-twentieth of a degree by 2050. "

Dr. S. Fred Singer, atmospheric physicist
Professor Emeritus of Environmental Sciences at the University of Virginia,
and former director of the US Weather Satellite Service;
in a Sept. 10, 2001 Letter to Editor, Wall Street Journal

lower tropospheric temps chart

This chart shows the monthly temperature changes for the lower troposphere - Earth's atmosphere from the surface to 8 km, or 5 miles up. The temperature in this region is more strongly influenced by oceanic activity, particularly the "El Niño" and "La Niña" phenomena, which originate as changes in oceanic and atmospheric circulations in the tropical Pacific Ocean. The overall trend in the tropospheric data is near zero, being +0.04 C/decade through Feb 2002. Click on the chart to get the numerical data.


 

Global Temperature Change across the last 2,400 years


 

Global Temperature Change since the Last Major Ice Age

52 posted on 04/26/2003 10:22:44 PM PDT by ancient_geezer
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To: EdZ
Comments on this one?
53 posted on 04/26/2003 10:31:54 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach (Where is Saddam? and where is Tom Daschle?)
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To: RightWhale
None too soon. She can't spin a yarn for s... um, to save her life.
54 posted on 04/26/2003 11:14:57 PM PDT by Calvin Locke
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bump
55 posted on 04/27/2003 10:48:28 AM PDT by green team 1999
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
bump-and thanks for the ping
56 posted on 04/28/2003 7:48:02 AM PDT by VOA
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To: PeaceBeWithYou
As the world gets warmer, it is getting wetter. And one of the main conclusions reached at Europe's largest ever earth sciences conference was that we are less prepared for it than ever.

Yeah, our ancestors almost were killed off during the last warm period from 800-1400 AD. Oops, they weren't. What gives?

57 posted on 04/28/2003 7:53:22 AM PDT by dirtboy (Tagline under construction, fines doubled for speeding)
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