Climate changewhy the urgency

hello

my name is jamie and i’m a geologist

what that means is i’ve spent the better

part of my adult life

explaining to people that i don’t just

study rocks i’ve told this to my family

i’ve told this to my friends i’ve told

this to

border control agents instead i study

the earth

and there are a lot of things that

really excite me about the

earth for example in the image that you

see here

i study the interaction between the

surface waters of the ocean

and how those interact with the

atmosphere to form the sort of swirling

spheres that you see

across the tropical ocean there and

those are the storm tracks that we know

the hurricanes that bring us all sorts

of weather

i study very interesting interactions

between

life in the surface ocean with the water

and the atmosphere

i study really interesting interactions

between life on land with the soil and

extreme environments

and what that’s taught me to learn

which you can’t say it says dear

inhabitants is to understand

and listen to the earth in a way that i

think

most of us don’t really understand on a

day-to-day life

or in our day-to-day life and so

what i want to share with you today over

20

years of research that i’ve been doing

are the sort of

lessons learned so how many of you have

seen the figure over here on the left

by show of hands

just a few on the left here what we’re

looking at

is how co2 is changing in our atmosphere

so that’s carbon dioxide

so carbon dioxide as you can see since

about 1956

has been rising and we know that largely

to david keeling here who started

measuring the amount of co2 in our

atmosphere

back in 1956 and for those of you who

have a keen eye

instead of just the black line that

you’ve been seeing you can see this red

line that sort of

underlines that black line so if we look

just the past

five years this red line you can see

goes up

and it goes down and that’s happening

over an annual cycle

if you think about why that’s actually

happening it’s really fascinating

so most of the vegetation on earth is

located in the northern hemisphere

and the trees here as an example so

in at the start of spring trees start to

get their leaves they start to grow

they photosynthesize and we would start

at the top of one of these red peaks

and as those trees and plants in the

northern hemisphere photosynthesize

they breathe in and they breathe in the

carbon dioxide

there’s so many of them that we can

actually measure that in the global

atmosphere

and then during autumn and during winter

those trees they lose their leaves the

plants start to

become dormant and that co2 starts to

increase again

until spring comes again so that’s what

we’re seeing here

if that were the only thing that was

happening on earth in terms of the

carbon dioxide

the black line that you see would just

be a flat line hovering around whatever

the concentration was

in the atmosphere but instead we see

that that’s rising

and david keeling back as early as 1960

was able to tell that that was rising

and he was able to tell that that’s due

to fossil fuel burning

and how we’re changing land use

so if we look again at the record from

1956

till today being a geologist and

studying the earth

allows me to think about things in

longer time periods the earth’s been

around a lot longer than the rest of us

have been and so

often we don’t think about the very long

time scales

so we can actually extend this record

back through time

by using ice cores

that are over 3000 meters long they were

collected by scientists

and they come from antarctica and

they’re able to look at the little

bubbles within these ice cores

and measure the atmosphere in those

bubbles and that gives us a record of

how carbon dioxide

has changed through much longer time

periods

so the first one that i’m going to show

you now is we’re going back to 1700

ad so i’ve i’ve extended time in that

direction

which means the part we were looking at

before is just here all squished up to

the top so

this is the change that we were looking

at from 1956 till present

and what you can see over 300 years of

time and said

is that carbon dioxide in the atmosphere

has been rising since maybe around the

mid

1800s or so and we can see that

the change in co2 and the increase in

co2 in the atmosphere is increasing

a lot more towards the present time

which is shown by the steepness of that

line

so we can look back even further in time

we can go all the way to 10

000 years ago and when we look across

this time frame

carbon dioxide has been relatively

stable over that time period in the

global sense and we can start to see

that

the changes that we’re seeing today

are a lot more obvious and they’re a lot

more different from what we saw

previously and even though co2 is quite

stable during this time period

there are periods in time when there

have been major cultural

and land changes so if you were to time

travel

back 8 000 years ago and you were going

to go to the african sahel

you would look around you and you would

describe the landscape as green

wet lush rivers whereas today

even though there were not huge global

changes that happened at

over the course of time today it would

be a very arid landscape and if you were

trying to make your living here it’d be

quite difficult

another example is the mayan

civilization

which around 1300 years ago

collapsed and the collapse of the mayan

civilization civilization

is attributed to the droughts that they

experienced along with social pressures

but you can see in this global record of

carbon dioxide

very little was happening globally at

the time

although locally there were very severe

droughts that occurred

so this is the furthest back in time

we can extend our record from the vostok

ice core this is 800 000 years ago

and you can see today is all the way up

here

one of the things that you might see in

the record is we’re seeing sort of

cycles similar to what we saw on an

annual basis

from the trees breathing in and

breathing out and what this is actually

showing us

is what the earth is doing over very

long time scales almost as a built-in

thermostat so you can see that

these periods of time where there’s

rises

happen really quickly and those are

warming periods going into interglacials

similar to where we are today and

the long long cooling trends that we see

going down

these are glacial periods these are

periods where a large part of the

northern hemisphere is actually

covered in miles of ice it’s a very

thick ice

and it’s what we can see is

and what we know is is that these high

co2

fast co2 events correspond with very

quick

warming temperatures there’s feedbacks

in the sim

system that amplify those but

the main processes earth has

for this cooling is to

dissolve mountains and dissolve rocks so

rain water dissolving granite so if you

drip drain water

on your kitchen counter made of granite

until it dissolved those are the sort of

time scales it takes

for the earth naturally to take carbon

dioxide out of the atmosphere

so if we look at the kind of changes

that are happening today

scientists have been able to do a lot of

clever things to understand what’s

happening

and one of the ones that concerns me

that i want to share with you

is about ocean heat content so they’ve

been able to go back to

very early measurements of ocean

temperatures

this is the challenger this is an

expedition that went out in the late

1800s

and they’re able to combine the

measurements from these shipboard

measurements

with more recent um high-tech kind of

measurements and what you can see here

is back from those original measurements

um on the challenger how ocean heat

content has changed

so in the light blue here if you can

make it out that’s the surface ocean

in the medium blue that’s kind of the

middle ocean and

in the dark blue here what you’re seeing

is we’re making measurable changes

to the heat content of the ocean down

below two kilometers

so a very large volume of water

and the thing that concerns me is

that in the first 132 years of the

record

there’s been a hundred and fifty

zeddjoules of energy absorbed and it

doesn’t concern me because i know what

azettagil is because i don’t

um but it concerns me because if you

look from 1997

to 2015 in the record the same amount

of heat energy has been absorbed as it

took 132 years to absorb previously

in terms of a zetta jewel one

joule is the amount of energy it would

take to lift an

apple so you can’t see it here because

of the lights

but one zetta jewel is 10 to the 21

joules so 10 to the 21 apples you’d have

to be able to carry to equal a zededual

and the authors explain that as being

if you dropped an atomic bomb the size

of hiroshima

every second for a year that would be

two zeddy jewels

and so what we’re talking about within

those 18

years that we’ve put 150 zetta jules in

that would be the equivalent

of basically exploding a hiroshima bomb

every second for 75 years which is

a humanly inconceivable amount of energy

that we’re storing in the oceans

what do we know about what happens with

the energy in the oceans

we know the ocean heat content drives

things like storms and storm tracks

and the intensity of storm trucks um

and although that was a tropical one

that we just looked at

some of my research is looking at what

happens this is showing the atmosphere

how the jet stream moves from north

america

across the atlantic ocean towards the uk

towards europe and i study places both

in the uk

and in europe and unfortunately the

projection

for the uk is that we’re going to get

wetter

so we’re going to be kind of stuck in

this phase where

a lot of water gets delivered to us but

you’ll notice down here

in spain while these sort of

images might be more common here

in spain where i do research aridity is

continuing to happen

so i study some of these environments

that are very high in elevation

and it’s because they’re very sensitive

to climate and they kind of give us a

forewarning of what’s happening

in these sites that i study so this is

one of the lakes that i study down here

la mosca this catchment has lost all of

its glaciers and in fact the sierra

nevada in southern

spain is the first mountain range to

lose all of its glaciers

and it lost them back in 1920.

this here similar to the ice cores are

the kind of records that i work with

this is mud from the bottom of the lake

that i had just shown you a picture of

and what we know from investigating this

lake mud and the things that it contains

is that these sites have already warmed

over two degrees in terms of summer

temperatures

and we know that the warming that’s

happening in these high elevation

sites is higher than anything we’ve seen

in the last 2000 years

and so these are the things that sort of

concern me and i think that other people

need to hear about

if you’ve paid attention to the

intergovernmental panel on climate

change

they’ve had a report that came out in

2018

and what they suggested that there’s

major consequences

for us overshooting that 1.5 degree

target

if we if we overshoot it by even half of

a degree

some of the things that they talk about

are the insects will be

twice as likely to lose half of their

habitat

99 of corals will go extinct

rather than in the current scenarios

under 1.5 degrees

they have a 10 chance of surviving

and then we know too that as as we just

looked at heat content as you warm water

it expands in addition to melting ice

sheets

sea level rise if we hit that 2 degree

mark would affect 10 million more people

than it’s predicted to hit at the moment

so sorry this hasn’t come up quite right

but this is the reason why

many people such as jim hansen

who used to be the director of nasa

goddard

who makes all the climate models

prominent

environmental attorneys and concerned

citizens are getting together

and they’re trying to get the message

out

that climate change is happening

in terms of it being an emergency it’s

something that the scientific community

has felt

all the way back since the 70s jim

henson was testifying in front of

congress in the u.s

and i think if the earth were to speak

to us today

it would ask us to give the earth a

voice

and basically say that it’s not too late

but we need to act collaboratively

and we need to act now so thank you

你好,

我的名字是杰米,我是一名地质学家

,这意味着我成年后的大部分时间都在

向人们解释我不只是

研究岩石我已经告诉我的家人

我已经告诉了这个 对我的朋友们,我已经把

这个告诉

边境管制人员,我

研究地球

,有很多关于地球的事情让

我非常兴奋

,例如在你在这里看到的图像中,

我研究了地球

表面水之间的相互作用 海洋

,以及它们如何与大气相互作用,

形成

你在热带海洋中看到的那种旋转球体,

这些是我们所知道的风暴轨迹,

飓风给我们带来了

各种天气,

我研究了生命之间非常有趣的相互作用

表层海洋与水

和大气

我研究

了陆地上的生命与土壤和极端环境之间非常有趣的相互作用,

以及这教会我学习的东西

,你不能说亲爱的

居民是

以一种我

认为

我们大多数人

在日常生活或日常生活中并不真正理解的方式了解和倾听地球,所以

我想与你分享

20

多年来的今天 我一直在做的研究是

从中吸取的教训,所以你们中有多少人

通过举手看到了左边的这个数字

只有左边的几个我们正在

研究的

是二氧化碳是如何变化的 在我们的大气中

,那是

二氧化碳,所以你们可以看到,自 1956 年左右以来,二氧化碳

一直在上升,我们知道这在很大程度上

要归功于 david keeling,他早在 1956 年就开始

测量我们大气中的二氧化碳含量

,对于你们中的那些

有 敏锐的眼睛,

而不仅仅是你所看到的黑线,

你可以看到这条红线

在黑线的下划线,所以如果我们

只看过去

五年,你可以看到这条红线

上升

,然后下降,那就是 如果您考虑一下为什么会发生这种情况

,那么每年都会

发生一次 盟友

发生这真的很迷人,

所以地球上的大部分植被都

位于北半球

,这里的树木作为一个例子,所以

在春天开始时,树木

开始长叶子,它们开始生长,

它们进行光合作用,我们

将从 在这些红色山峰之一的顶部

,当北半球的那些树木和植物进行

光合作用时,

它们吸入并吸入

二氧化碳

,它们的数量如此之多,以至于我们

实际上可以在全球大气中测量到

,然后在秋季和冬季测量

那些树,他们失去了叶子,

植物

开始休眠,二氧化碳开始

再次增加,

直到春天再次来临,所以这就是

我们在这里看到的,

如果这是地球上唯一发生的事情,就

二氧化碳而言

,黑色 您看到的线将

只是一条围绕大气

中浓度

的平线,但相反我们

看到它正在上升

并且 d 早在 1960 年,狂热的退缩

就能够判断出这种情况正在上升

,他能够判断出这是

由于化石燃料燃烧

以及我们如何改变土地利用,

所以如果我们再次查看从

1956 年

到今天的记录, 地质学家和

研究地球

让我能够思考

更长的

时间段内的事物

通过使用

超过 3000 米长的冰芯回到过去,它们是

由科学家收集的

,它们来自南极洲,

他们能够观察

这些冰芯中的小气泡

并测量这些

气泡中的大气,这给了我们一个 记录

二氧化碳如何

在更长的时间段内发生变化,

所以我现在要向您展示的第一个

是我们要回到 1700 年

广告,所以我已经在那个方向上延长了时间,

这意味着部分 我们之前看到

的只是在这里都挤到

了顶部,所以

这是

我们从 1956 年到现在

看到的变化,你可以看到 300 多年的

时间,并说

大气中的二氧化碳

一直在上升 因为可能是在

1800 年代中期左右,我们可以看到大气

中二氧化碳的变化和二氧化碳的增加

正在

向现在增加很多,

这可以通过这条线的陡峭程度来证明,

所以我们可以进一步回顾 随着时间的推移,

我们可以一直追溯到 10

000 年前,当我们回顾

这个时间框架

时,在全球范围内,二氧化碳在那个时间段内一直相对稳定

,我们可以开始

看到我们今天看到的变化

更明显,它们

与我们之前看到的也有很大不同

,尽管二氧化碳

在这段时间内相当稳定,但有时

会发生重大的文化

和土地变化,所以如果你是 时光

倒流回到 8 000 年前,你

要去非洲萨赫勒地区

,你会环顾四周,

将风景描述为绿色

潮湿、郁郁葱葱的河流,而今天

,尽管整个过程中并没有发生巨大的

全球变化 今天的时间,这将

是一个非常干旱的景观,如果

你想在这里谋生,那将是

相当困难的

另一个例子是

大约 1300 年前

崩溃的玛雅文明,玛雅

文明

的崩溃归因于 他们

经历的干旱伴随着社会压力,

但你可以在这张全球二氧化碳记录中看到,

当时全球几乎没有发生,

尽管当地发生了非常严重的

干旱,

所以这是

我们可以延长记录的最远时间 沃斯托克

冰芯,这是 80 万年前

,你今天可以看到一直到

这里

,你可能会看到的东西

之一 记录是

我们看到的循环类似于我们

每年

看到的树木呼吸和

呼吸的循环,而这实际上

我们展示的是地球在很

长一段时间内几乎作为一个内置物在做什么

恒温器,因此您可以看到

这些

上升的时期

发生得非常快,那些是

进入间冰期的变暖时期,

类似于我们今天所处的位置,以及

我们看到下降的长期冷却趋势

这些是冰川期,这些

时期是

北半球的大部分地区实际上

被数英里长的冰覆盖,这是一层非常

厚的冰

,这是我们所看到的

,我们所知道的是,这些高

二氧化碳

快速二氧化碳事件对应于非常

快速的

升温温度

模拟

系统中有反馈 放大这些,但

地球冷却的主要过程

溶解山脉和溶解岩石,所以

雨水溶解花岗岩,所以如果你

滴下排水

在你用花岗岩制成的厨房柜台上,

直到它溶解,这就是

地球自然

从大气中吸收二氧化碳所需要的时间尺度,

所以如果我们看看今天发生的那种变化

科学家们已经能够做到 很多

聪明的事情来了解正在发生的

事情

,我想与你分享的一个与我

有关的事情是关于海洋热含量,所以他们

已经能够回到

海洋温度的早期测量,

这是挑战者 是

在 1800 年代后期进行的一次探险

,他们能够将

这些船上

测量的测量结果

与最近的高科技

测量结果相结合,而你在这里看到的

是来自挑战者的原始测量结果

海洋热

含量发生了变化,

所以这里是浅蓝色的,如果你

能看出那是

中蓝色的表层海洋,有点像

中间海洋,

在深蓝色中 你在这里看到的

是,我们正在对两公里以下

海洋的热含量做出可测量的变化,

因此水量非常大

,我担心的是

,在记录的前 132 年中

吸收了 150 泽焦耳的能量,

我不关心,因为我知道

azettagil 是什么,因为我不知道,

但它关心我,因为如果你

看一下从 1997 年

到 2015 年的记录,同样数量

的热能已经 吸收,因为

以前用 132 年的时间来吸收

一颗 zetta 宝石,1

焦耳是举起一个苹果所需的能量,

所以你在这里看不到它,

因为灯光,

但一颗 zetta 宝石是 10 到 21

焦耳等于 10 到 21 个苹果,你

必须能够携带相当于一个 zededual

,作者解释说,

如果你

在一年内每秒投下一颗广岛大小的原子弹,那将是

两颗 zeddy 珠宝

等等 我们在谈论什么

在这 18

年中,我们投入了 150 个 zetta jules

,这相当于

在 75 年内每秒引爆一颗广岛原子弹

,这

是人类无法想象的能量

,我们储存在海洋中

我们知道什么? 与

海洋中的能量有关,

我们知道海洋热量会

驱动风暴和风暴轨道

以及风暴卡车的强度

,虽然那是热带的

,但我们刚刚看了

一些我的研究正在研究

会发生什么这是 向大气

展示急流如何从北美

穿过大西洋向英国

流向欧洲,我研究

了英国

和欧洲的地方,不幸的

是,英国的预测是我们会变

得更湿,

所以我们 在这个阶段会有点卡住

,很多水会送到我们

这里,但你会注意到

在西班牙这里,而这些

图像

在我做的西班牙可能更常见 研究干旱

仍在继续发生,

所以我研究了其中一些

海拔非常高的环境

,这是因为它们

对气候非常敏感,它们给我们提供了

关于

我研究的这些地点正在发生的事情的预警,所以这是

一个 在我在这里研究的 la mosca 湖泊中,

这个流域已经失去了所有

的冰川,事实上,

西班牙南部的内华达

山脉是第一个

失去所有冰川的山脉

,它早在 1920 年就失去了它们。

这里类似于 冰芯是

我使用的那种记录

这是来自湖底的泥浆

,我刚刚给你看了一张照片

,我们从调查这个

湖泥中了解到,它所包含的东西

是这些地点有 就

夏季温度而言,已经升温超过两度

,我们知道

在这些高海拔

地区发生的变暖比我们在过去 2000 年看到的任何情况都要高

,所以这些是第 这

让我很担心,我认为其他人

需要了解一下,

如果你关注

政府间气候变化专门委员会,

他们已经在 2018 年发布了一份报告,

以及他们提出的对我们

产生重大影响的建议

如果我们超过 1.5 度的目标,即使我们超过了

0.5 度

,他们谈到的一些事情

是昆虫

失去一半栖息地的可能性将增加一倍

99 的珊瑚将灭绝,

而不是目前

在 1.5 度以下的情况下,

它们有 10 的生存机会

,然后我们也知道,当我们

看到热含量时,当你加热水时,

它会膨胀,除了融化的冰盖之外,

如果我们达到 2 度的标记,海平面上升

会影响 10

比目前预计的要多 100 万,

所以很抱歉,这不是很正确,

但这就是为什么

很多人,比如曾经担任美国宇航局戈达德主任的吉姆·汉森 (jim hansen

) 使所有气候模型

杰出的

环境律师和有关

公民聚集在一起

,他们试图传达

出气候变化正在发生

的信息,因为它是一种紧急情况,

这是科学界

自 70 年代的

吉姆汉森在美国国会面前作证

,我认为如果地球今天要

对我们说话,

它会要求我们给地球一个

声音

,基本上说现在还为时不晚,

但我们需要合作采取行动

,我们 现在需要采取行动,所以谢谢