



A new book pictures the science of climate change
By Gavin Schmidt and Josh Wolfe | April 23, 2009 | 13
The summer of 2007 saw two sets of forest fires rage across Greece. The first picture is from Poros in June, where fires broke out during the heat wave's highest temperatures, which were above 110 Fahrenheit, or 43 degrees Celsius....[More]
The summer of 2007 saw two sets of forest fires rage across Greece. The first picture is from Poros in June, where fires broke out during the heat wave's highest temperatures, which were above 110 Fahrenheit, or 43 degrees Celsius. [Less] [Link to this slide]
A second wave of infernos occurred in August as seen in this satellite image. A combination of little precipitation and multiple heat waves left Greece particularly vulnerable....[More]
A second wave of infernos occurred in August as seen in this satellite image. A combination of little precipitation and multiple heat waves left Greece particularly vulnerable. By the end of summer 2007 there had been 120 major fires and 469,000 acres (190,000 hectares) of forest land had been burned. [Less] [Link to this slide]
The Mendenhall Glacier in Tongass National Forest near Juneau, Alaska, photographed in 1894 and again in 2004. Like almost all Alaskan glaciers, and indeed, most glaciers globally, there has been a dramatic retreat of the front the glacier as a function of warmer temperatures during summer and reduced snowfall in winter....[More]
The Mendenhall Glacier in Tongass National Forest near Juneau, Alaska, photographed in 1894 and again in 2004. Like almost all Alaskan glaciers, and indeed, most glaciers globally, there has been a dramatic retreat of the front the glacier as a function of warmer temperatures during summer and reduced snowfall in winter. [Less] [Link to this slide]
Arctic soils are generally kept together by ice and permafrost. As the permafrost melts, the soils become sandy and erode easily. On the coast, sea ice retreat also exposes them to increased ocean wave activity....[More]
Arctic soils are generally kept together by ice and permafrost. As the permafrost melts, the soils become sandy and erode easily. On the coast, sea ice retreat also exposes them to increased ocean wave activity. When both effects combine, as in the town of Shishmaref on the Bering Sea, coastal erosion rates can reach more than (60 feet, or 20 meters) a year, and, in this case, have led to abandonment of the town. [Less] [Link to this slide]
Kudzu growth in Melville, N.Y. An invasive species, kudzu was initially imported from Japan for ornamental gardening and agricultural purposes in the southern U.S....[More]
Kudzu growth in Melville, N.Y. An invasive species, kudzu was initially imported from Japan for ornamental gardening and agricultural purposes in the southern U.S. but rapidly became a pest due to its lack of predators and fast growth. In the past 10 years, it has moved inexorably farther north as temperatures have warmed, allowing it to reproduce in previously inhospitable areas. [Less] [Link to this slide]
Mount Schrankogl, Austria. Daniela Hohenwallner is counting bryophytes (mosses) and other high-altitude flora, in systematically measured out 10 square foot (one square meter) quadrants....[More]
Mount Schrankogl, Austria. Daniela Hohenwallner is counting bryophytes (mosses) and other high-altitude flora, in systematically measured out 10 square foot (one square meter) quadrants. These results will be compared with similar surveys in decades past (and future) to track the climate change impacts on alpine ecosystems. [Less] [Link to this slide]
In McCamey, Tex., the wide open spaces, previously populated only by nodding donkey oil pumps, turn out to be suitable for wind turbines, too. The state has the largest capacity and the fastest growth rate wind-based generating capacity in the U.S....[More]
In McCamey, Tex., the wide open spaces, previously populated only by nodding donkey oil pumps, turn out to be suitable for wind turbines, too. The state has the largest capacity and the fastest growth rate wind-based generating capacity in the U.S. [Less] [Link to this slide]
In the early years of climate modeling, all instructions were input into the mainframe using punch cards. Each card was good for one line of code, and a whole program would take hundreds to thousands of cards in exactly the right order....[More]
In the early years of climate modeling, all instructions were input into the mainframe using punch cards. Each card was good for one line of code, and a whole program would take hundreds to thousands of cards in exactly the right order. Gary Russell is holding output that he saved from an Amdahl V/6 machine used by NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies. [Less] [Link to this slide]
The Capitol Power Plant in southeast Washington, D.C., used to supply heat to building, is the only coal-fired plant in the nation's capital and is responsible for a large part of the city's air pollution and carbon emissions....[More]
The Capitol Power Plant in southeast Washington, D.C., used to supply heat to building, is the only coal-fired plant in the nation's capital and is responsible for a large part of the city's air pollution and carbon emissions. Efforts to reduce the amount of coal burning have been stalled by lawmakers from coal-producing states, underscoring the difficulties in organizing federal action to curb emissions. [Less] [Link to this slide]
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13 Comments
Add CommentHow does this picture the science of climate change? Climate change is something that happens over time and the science of climate is the study of that occurrence. These pictures have little to do with the science. I am disappointed.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisNo science here. But given SCIAM's editor's proclivities for publishing their advertiser's talking points and attempting to pass them off as science as I'm not surprised.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisHow much ad revenue does SCIAM take in from environmental activist groups anyway?
Why is it when scientists show the science of climate change, of course it's too complex for the laymen and the naysayers have a field day rallying against it. "there's no hockey stick, glaciers are not retreating, Hackinsack NJ was actually colder last year, the little ice age...., etc. etc." None of this matches against the body of knowledge that goes into the theory of climate change across numerous fields of study. Yet when someone puts out a book of photos showing incidences of where climate change is having a real impact and, God forbid, someone is actually doing something to counteract energy dependency if not combat climate change, then they're criticised because "that's not science".
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisWell if naysayers can rely upon "my granny said it was really warm in 1933 or, we'll all be out of work living in caves if we do anything" statements, with no basis in fact or bearing on the discussion, I'd say a book of photos is absolutely fair game.
We'll all be out of work living in caves.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisJapanese knotweed rarely
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisproduces viable seeds. In the
UK the plant is mainly spread
through rhizome fragments or cut
stems. Greenhouse trials have
shown that as little as 0.7 gram
of rhizome material (10 mm in
length) can produce a new plant
within 10 days. Cut fresh stems
have also been shown to produce
shoots and roots from nodes
when buried in soil or immersed
in water. Once cut stem material
has been allowed to dry out
thoroughly and has reached the
orange/brown woody stage,
there is no further regeneration.
Rhizome material may take much
longer to die and may remain
dormant for long periods, possibly
as long as 20 years.
This a quote from the UK Enviroment Agency Kudzu code of practice. No mention of climate change
I'd give some validity to your statement on advertisers if there wasn't a Conoco Phillips ad currently being shown. Because as we all know they are a huge environmental activist group.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisI'd give some validity to your statement on advertisers if there wasn't a Conoco Phillips ad currently being shown. Because as we all know they are a huge environmental activist group.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisG.E. is sponcering many skewed documentries to validate GW. I have spent time in a desert that was over 135F and I did not catch fire. This was 40 years ago (that was before GW). Carbon c must be a good bet for the pres of G.E.. Follow the money.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisCaves of darkness may just be a paradigm construct to prevent illumination. Oh yeah-it's the corporations and advertisers that are against us. Reminds me of the skeptics regarding DDT toxicity 30 years ago.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisCheck out the third photo of the Mendenhall Glacier in 1894 and again in 2004. Perhaps it's to satisfy the cruise ship lines that might also advertise in SCIAM.
The picture that seems to imply that the temperature in NY is now what the temperature in North Georgia was shortly after WWII is one of the things that hurts the credibility of global warming. The fact that glaciers have been creeping backwards (not making up for their melting with new ice flow down the valley) for over 100 years does not do much good either. There are lots of good pictures to demonstrate the logic without ones that are so probably not related to the problem.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisClimate is changing all the time. It changes daily, weekly, monthly, annually, and within each lifetime it changes many times. It even changes over hundreds, thousands and millions of years. So "climate change" is a valid name for the process of a changing climate!
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisHowever, how you interpret it as bad or good depends directly on how it affects you. A person on the coast who 'may' lose his/her beach front or home with the rising oceans (if it ever happens) will consider it bad. A person in Canada or Alaska who suddenly enjoys another two or three weeks of warm weather 'may' consider climate change as good.
These pictures of 'climate change' are nothing more than that - pictures of a point in time. Come back a year or five or ten years from now and take a picture at the same spot and you will see a completely different picture with a completely different interpretation of what it means.
The so called "cause" of climate pollution by advocates of CO2 reduction are hiding a bigger problem.
We are wasting to much time, money and worry on climate change when in fact we should be more concerned with environmental pollution! The steps required to accomplish the clean-up of our home environment are more easily understood, probably more acceptable to more people, much easier to measure and will accomplish the same thing as asking people to reduce CO2 emissions. It will certainly accomplish more then carbon credits trading. That is nothing more than a scam perpetrated by the biggest polluters to divert attention away from the REAL problem - pollution of our air, water and environment.
This is what climate change science looks like:
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thishttp://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/05/06/the-global-warming-hypothesis-and-ocean-heat/
GISS model is busted. AGW is a political imagining. Apocalypse called due to reality check.
Why do they call these photos "Climate Change", when what they really depict is "Global Warming". Another politically correct, distraction, from the real problems besetting the globe. As it stands "Global Cooling" would fit "Climate Change" criteria, as the globe hasn't warmed for a decade.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this