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climate |
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climate![]() The world's climatic zones. There are many systems of classifying climate. One system, that of Wladimir Köppen, was based on temperature and plant type. Other systems take into account the distribution of global winds. ![]() The warming effect of the Earth's atmosphere is called the greenhouse effect. Radiation from the Sun enters the atmosphere but is prevented from escaping back into space by gases such as carbon dioxide (produced for example, by the burning of fossil fuels), nitrogen oxides (from car exhausts), and CFCs (from aerosols and refrigerators). As these gases build up in the atmosphere, the Earth's average temperature is expected to rise. Combination of weather conditions at a particular place over a period of time – usually a minimum of 30 years. A climate classification encompasses the averages, extremes, and frequencies of all meteorological elements such as temperature, atmospheric pressure, precipitation, wind, humidity, and sunshine, together with the factors that influence them. The primary factors that influence differences of climate between different areas of the globe are: latitude (as a result of the Earth's rotation and orbit); ocean currents; large-scale movements of wind belts and air masses over the Earth's surface; temperature differences between land and sea surfaces; topography; continent positions; and vegetation. The factors that determine the overall climate of the planet in the long term include the composition of the atmosphere, changes in the Earth's orbit, and changes in the angle of inclination of its axis. Climatologists have become especially concerned with the influences of human activity on climate change, among the most important of which, at both local and global levels, are those currently linked with ozone depleters, the greenhouse effect, and the consequent global warming.
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Models have successfully replicated historical climates, but no model has ever demonstrated that it can accurately predict the climate impact of C[O. Our observations helped to persuade the eight Arctic States to launch the Arctic Climate Impact Assessment (ACIA) in 2000, involving more than 300 scientists from 15 countries, and assisted by Arctic indigenous peoples. 2007) and the Arctic Climate Impact Assessment (ACIA 2004), we now know that the deep oceans have accumulated 22 times more heat than has the atmosphere, ice melt is accelerating, wind patterns are shifting (that's particularly ominous), and nonlinear surprises are very likely in store for the climate system and for the impacts on systems such as forests and coral reefs (Epstein and Mills 2005; Stern 2006). |
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