the moveable “desert maker” phil gersmehl michigan geographic alliance climate change in history

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The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance [email protected] Climate Change in History

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1. What makes deserts? A typical climate map has a lot of info. It’s almost impossible to remember.

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Page 1: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

The Moveable “Desert Maker”

Phil GersmehlMichigan Geographic Alliance

[email protected]

Climate Changein

History

Page 2: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

To understand the role of climate change in history, students should be aware of three things:

1. the system that makes tropical deserts,

2. the systems that cause natural climate cycles,

3. the difference between weather and climate.

Page 3: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

1. What makes deserts?A typical climate map has a lot of info.It’s almost impossible to remember.

Page 4: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

Let’s “declutter” and focus.“Describe the pattern of dry climates.”

Page 5: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

Q. What causes tropical deserts?

A. Rain near the equator.

This globe is turnedso the equator is up.

Sun-heated air rises and makes rainover the equator . . .

AND

it has to come down

somewhere.

Page 6: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

Given the earth’s size, 24-hour rotation, distance from sun, etc.“down” is 20-25 degrees of latitude from where it went up.

Page 7: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

And where the air comes down, it makes a desert.

Given the earth’s size, 24-hour rotation, distance from sun, etc.“down” is 20-25 degrees of latitude from where it went up.

Page 8: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

And where the air comes down, it makes a desert.

Given the earth’s size, 24-hour rotation, distance from sun, etc.“down” is 20-25 degrees of latitude from where it went up.

How would you describe the geographic pattern of deserts?How would you describe the geographic pattern of deserts?“Start 1000 miles west of each continent on the Tropic line.

Spread to about 20 latitude degrees; stop at the mountains.”

“Rainshadow” desertseast of the mountains

in the westerly wind area

Page 9: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

How does this relate to history(and our GLCEs)?

Page 10: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

This is a simple graph of temperature thru time.

Agriculturestarts

Irrigationstarts

South Asiaflourishes

Anatolia(Turkey) is rainy Greece

is rainy

Rome expandsinto Europe

Barbariansinvade Rome, Han dynasty

collapses

Vikings, Mongols

Mingdynastycollapses

Hunters thrive

Page 11: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

To remember these facts,put them on a world map of deserts.

Remember, Tropical deserts formwhere air that rose up at the equator

is pushed back down.

This downward air movement(called the Subsidence)

will be farther from the equatorif warmer air makes

stronger storms near the Equator.

Page 12: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

This downward air movement(called the Subsidence)

will be farther from the equatorif warmer air makes

stronger storms near the Equator.

The science is not“easily accessible”

to ordinary citizens.

Page 13: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

It does, however, makesome specific predictions.

Page 14: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

When the global average temperature is HIGH,the “desert-maker” is pushed away from the equator.

Which places are likely to be helped?

? ????

Page 15: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

When the global average temperature is HIGH,the “desert-maker” is pushed away from the equator.

Which places are likely to be helped?

Plus some large northern areas that might get warm enough for farming.

Page 16: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

When the global average temperature is HIGH,the “desert-maker” is pushed away from the equator.

Which places are likely to be hurt?

Page 17: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

When the global average temperature is LOW,the “desert-maker” shifts toward the equator.

Which places are likely to be helped?

Page 18: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

When the global average temperature is LOW,the “desert-maker” shifts toward the equator.

Which places are likely to be hurt?

Page 19: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

When the global average temperature is LOW,the “desert-maker” shifts toward the equator.

Which places are likely to be hurt?

Plus some large areas that still have plenty of rain but are colder.

Page 20: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

Agriculturestarts

Irrigationneeded

South Asiaflourishes

Anatoliais rainy Greece

is rainy

Rome expandsinto Europe

Barbariansinvade Rome, Han dynasty

collapses

Vikings, Mongols

Mingdynastycollapses

Hunters thrive That’s the science

behind a simple fact:

Climate changes hada big impact on history.

Global warming is bad for some places and good for others.

Page 21: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

Whatabout

today?

Page 22: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

The name is covered, becausethis is about ideas, not personalities

Page 23: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

Here’s why there are “natural” cycles of climate:Earth’s orbit is not a perfect circle.It’s a wobbly tilt on a wobbly oval.

Page 24: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

You can find the details on a lot of web sites:

www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/ctl/clisci100ka.html

Page 25: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

almost 6 peaks in 500,000 years =1 cycle in roughly

90,000 years.

Wobble #1. From a circle (r = 93 million miles)to an ellipse (r = 90 to 95Mmi, in different seasons)

Page 26: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

about 13 peaks in 500,000 years =1 cycle in roughly

41,000 years.

Wobble #2. From a tilt of about 22.3 degrees to a tilt of nearly 24.5 degrees.

Page 27: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

about 23 peaks in 500,000 years =1 cycle in roughly

21,000 years.

Wobble #3. From the sun being closer in July to being closer in January.

Page 28: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

A high pointin solar radiation

comes roughly once every 100,000 years.

Put this all together – sun intensity varies a lot.

Page 29: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

We also have450,000 years oftemperature data

from ice coresin Antarctica.

A high pointin temperature

roughly once every100,000 years.

Page 30: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

The record ofcarbon dioxideshow the same

five peaks.

Page 31: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

S U N S H I N E

C A R B O N D I O X I D E

T E M P E R A T U R E

Let’s look atthree graphs

together,to see how

they compare.

Solar energy,temperature, and

carbon dioxide are obviously related(but it’s complicated).

Page 32: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

Temperature and carbon dioxideare related, andone conclusion

is beyond doubt:

temperatureshave been higher

in the pastthan they are

today.

Page 33: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

Temperatures were much higherin the distant past

and a little higherquite recently.

PRESENTAVERAGE

Page 34: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

BUT, there is a

big problemwith these graphs.

The most recentmeasurements

do not fiton the scale.

Page 35: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

When we adjustthe vertical scaleso the numbers

all can fit,

you can see thatcarbon dioxide is

WAY above its “normal” range.

Page 36: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

In justa few hundred years,

humans have “pushed”the climate system

way out of linewith “normal” cycles.

In 2015, 402

Page 37: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

In October 2013,

the Pacific Ocean hadvery high temperatures. One result was

one of the strongesthurricanes ever measured

near the Philippines.

Page 38: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

Weeks later,this hurricane carriedenormous amounts

of energy northward.

Page 39: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

Excessive heatmoving toward the pole

can push cold airtoward the equator

Excessive heatmoving toward the pole

Page 40: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

This map shows world temperature two months later.Winter 2014 was unusually cold in Michigan,

BUT look at the average for the globe as a whole.

5 areas “much cooler than average” 0 areas “record coldest”

19 areas “much warmer than average” 9 areas “record warmest”

Page 41: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

And if you look at the total for the entire year,the imbalance becomes even more obvious.

15 7422 196

Page 42: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

As one Blogger asked:

Can global warmingbe real

if it is unusually cold in the United States?

Page 43: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

As one Blogger asked:

Can global warmingbe real

if it is unusually cold in the United States?

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Page 44: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History
Page 45: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

Interesting fact: these researcherscome from universities and government labs in Australia, Argentina, Canada, China, England, Germany, Israel, Italy, Korea, and South Africa,

as well as NCAR, NOAA, and 3 U.S. universities.

Page 46: The Moveable “Desert Maker” Phil Gersmehl Michigan Geographic Alliance Climate Change in History

Copyright 2015, Phil Gersmehl

Teachers who saw this presentation at a workshopor downloaded it from our internet site have permission

to make a copy on their own computers for these purposes: 1. to help them review the workshop, 2. to show the presentation in their own classrooms, at sessions they present at teacher conferences, or to administrators in their own school or district, 3. to use individual frames (with attribution) in their own class or conference presentations.

For permission for any other use, including posting frames on a personal blog

or uploading to any network or websitethat can be accessed from outside your school,

contact [email protected]