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100,000-year problem - a
discrepancy between the climate response and the forcing from the
amount of incoming solar radiation.
A
Albedo -
An index of the "reflectiveness" - a way of quantifying how much
radiation is reflected back, as opposed to that absorbed. low
albedo ~0 absorb most of the radiation and high ~1 reflect it
.
Anoxic
event - a period when the Earth's oceans are free of oxygen below the surface
layer.
Antarctic oscillation
(AAO) - a low-frequency mode of atmospheric variability of the
southern hemisphere.
Anti-greenhouse effect
- the cooling effect an atmosphere has on the ambient temperature
of the planet.
Arctic amplification - The effect of sea ice
melting replace high albedo ice with low albedo sea that absorb the
radiation from the sun get warmer and melt more ice.
Arctic oscillation (AO) -
the dominant pattern of non-seasonal sea-level pressure (SLP)
variations north of 20 degrees N, and it is
characterized by SLP anomalies of one sign in the Arctic and
anomalies of opposite sign centered about 37-45 degrees
N. See also NAO.
Arctic shrinkage - the marked
decrease in Arctic sea ice and the observed melting of the
Greenland Ice Sheet in recent years.
Atmospheric sciences - an
umbrella term for the study of the atmosphere, its processes, the
effects other systems have on the atmosphere, and the effects of
the atmosphere on these other systems.
Atmospheric window - refers
to those parts of the electromagnetic spectrum that are, with the
Earth's atmosphere in its natural state, not absorbed at all.
Carbon
cycle - the biogeochemical cycle by which carbon is
exchanged between the biosphere, geosphere, hydrosphere, and
atmosphere of the Earth.
Carbon
diet - the act of reducing the output of CO2 to reduce
impact on the environment.
Carbon sequestration -
proposals for removing CO2 from the atmosphere, or for preventing
CO2 from fossil fuel use ever being released.
Carbon
offset - opportunity for individuals and businesses to
neutralize their contribution to climate change.
Carbon
tax - a tax on energy sources which emit carbon
dioxide.
Clathrate gun
hypothesis - the hypothesis that melting methance
clathrates could trigger runaway or very severe global
warming.
Climate
- the average and variations of weather in a region over long
periods of time.
Climate change - changes of
climate in general, usually with no presumption of human influence.
Note, however, that there is one important exception to this: the
UNFCCC
defines "climate change" as anthropogenic.
Climate ethics - an area of
research that focuses on the ethical dimensions of climate
change.
Climate legislation -
legislation dealing with regulation of greenhouse gas
emissions.
Climate refugee - a displaced
person caused by climate change induced environmental
disasters.
Climate variability - climate change, with no
presumption of cause.
Climatology (Climate Science) -
the study of climate, scientifically defined as weather conditions
averaged over a period of time.
D
Desertification - the degradation of
land in arid and dry sub-humid areas, resulting primarily from
natural activities and influenced by climatic variations
Eco-efficiency - creating more
goods and services while using fewer resources and creating less
waste and pollution.
Earth's
atmosphere - a layer of gases surrounding the planet
Earth and retained by the Earth's gravity.
Earthshine - sunlight reflected
from Earth and illuminating the dark side of the Moon.
Ecotax -
fiscal policy that introduces taxes intended to promote
ecologically sustainable activities via economic incentives.
El Niño-Southern Oscillation
(ENSO) - a set of specific interacting parts of a single global
system of coupled ocean-atmosphere climate fluctuations that come
about as a consequence of oceanic and atmospheric circulation.
Emission
standards - requirements that set specific limits to
the amount of pollutants that can be released into the
environment
Enteric fermentation -
fermentation that takes place in the digestive systems of ruminant
animals.
Environmental crime -
crime against environmental legislation that is liable for
prosecution.
F
Feedbacks - either an amplification
(positive feedback) or a reduction
(negative feedback) of the rate of global warming
caused by its effects.
Fossil
fuel - fossil source fuels, that is, hydrocarbons
found within the top layer of the earth’s crust.
Freon - DuPont's trade name for
its odorless, colorless, nonflammable, and noncorrosive
chlorofluorocarbon and hydrochlorofluorocarbon refrigerants, which
are used in air conditioning and refrigeration systems.
G
Glacial earthquake -large
scale tremblors that occur in glaciated areas where the glacier
moves faster than one kilometer per year.
Global
cooling - conjecture during the 1970s of imminent
cooling of the Earth's surface and atmosphere along with a posited
commencement of glaciation.
Global climate model,
also General Circulation Model or
GCM - a computer model of the world's climate
system, including the atmosphere and oceans.
Global
dimming - the observed decrease in surface insolation,
that may have recently reversed
Global
warming - usually: the warming trend over the past
century or so; also: any period in which the temperature of the
Earth's atmosphere increases; also the theory of such changes.
Greenhouse gas - gasses that
cause the greenhouse effect
Gulf
Stream - a powerful, warm, and swift Atlantic ocean
current that originates in the Gulf of Mexico, exits through the
Strait of Florida, and follows the eastern coastlines of the United
States and Newfoundland before crossing the Atlantic Ocean.
H
Heiligendamm Process - an
initiative that will institutionalize high level dialogue between
the G8 countries and the five most
important emerging economies, known as the O5 (Outreach 5) composed
of China, Mexico, India, Brazil and South Africa; and the
establishment of a common G5 + G8 platform at the OECD.
Hockey stick
controversy - a dispute over the reconstructed
estimates of Northern Hemisphere mean temperature changes over the
past millennium, frequently referred to as the MBH98
reconstruction.
Holocene - a geological period, which
began approximately 11,550 calendar years BP (about 9600 BC) and continued to the
Anthropocene.
Ice age
- a period of long-term reduction in the temperature of Earth's
climate, resulting in an expansion of the continental ice sheets,
polar ice sheets and alpine glaciers.
Ice
core - a core sample from the accumulation of snow
and ice over many years that have re-crystallized and have trapped
air bubbles from previous time periods.
Insolation - amount of solar
radiation reaching the surface of the Earth.
Irradiance - amount of
electromagnetic radiation reaching a surface, measured in watts per
square meter.
Instrumental temperature
record - shows the fluctuations of the temperature of
the atmosphere and the oceans as measured by temperature sensors.
The longest-running quasi-global record starts in 1850.
Magnetosphere - the region
around an astronomical object in which phenomena are dominated or
organized by its magnetic field.
Maunder Minimum - the name
given to the period roughly from 1645 to 1715, when sunspots became
exceedingly rare, as noted by solar observers of the time.
Mauna
Loa - home to the longest instrumental CO2
record.
Mitigation of global
warming - involves taking actions to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions and to enhance sinks aimed at reducing the extent of
global warming
Mode of
variability - a pattern of climate change, usually
oscillatory, with specific regional effects
N
Nitrous
oxide (N2O) - a potent greenhouse gas
produced primarily in agriculture, particularly by the livestock
sector.
Paleocene–Eocene Thermal
Maximum (PETM) - a sudden warming event that
fundamentally altered geological and biological aspects of the
planet.
Paleoclimatology - the study
of climate change taken on the scale of the entire history of
Earth.
Polar amplification -
greater temperature increases in the Arctic than in the
earth as a whole) is a result of the collective effect of feedbacks
and other processes."[1] It does
not apply to the Antarctic, because the Southern Ocean
acts as a heat sink.[2]
Polar
city - a proposed human refuge located in northern
regions of the Earth, and in Tasmania, New Zealand and the
Antarctica, where people might have to live in order to survive
major global warming "events" in the far distant future, also
dubbed Lovelock Retreats.
Proxy - a variable that can be
related to one of interest (e.g. tree rings can be proxies for
temperature variations).
Q
R
Radiative forcing - is
(loosely) defined as the change in net irradiance at the
tropopause
Runaway greenhouse
effect - somewhat ill-defined term, associated with
the idea of large irreversible temperature rises
Solar variation - changes in
the amount of radiant energy emitted by the Sun.
Sunspot
- a region on the Sun's surface (photosphere) that is marked by a
lower temperature than its surroundings and has intense magnetic
activity, which inhibits convection, forming areas of low surface
temperature. Sunspot activity is subject to research on climate
change.
TEX-86 - a paleothermometer based on the
composition of membrane lipids of the marine picoplankton
Crenarchaeota.
Thermocline - (sometimes
metalimnion) is a layer within a body of water or air where the
temperature changes rapidly with depth.
Tipping point
(climatology) - the point at which change due to human
activity brings about sufficient new processes in nature to make
any human reversal of the change impossible.
U
Urban heat island - a
metropolitan area which is significantly warmer than its
surroundings.
(multilingual environmental glossary in 28 languages: ar, bg,
cs, da, de, el, en, es, et, eu, fi, fr, hu, is, it, lt, lv, mt, nl,
no, pl, pt, ro, ru, sk, sl, sv, tr)