POL
PHYSICAL PROCESSES AND WORLD REGIONS
Chapter 2
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Objectives
This chapter will enable you to:
Understand the tectonic forces behind some of the world’s major landforms and natural hazards
Recognize consistent global patterns in the distribution of vegetation types and climates
Identify the natural areas most threatened by human activity and explain how natural habitat loss may endanger human welfare
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Objectives (cont’d.)
Appreciate the important roles of the world’s oceans
Describe the potential impacts of global climate change and international efforts to prevent them
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Four Spheres of Earth’s Habitable Environment
Lithosphere
Hydrosphere
Atmosphere
Biosphere – “ecosphere”
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Geologic PrPlate Tectonics
Continental drift
Idea proposed by Alfred Wegener, 1912
Continents once joined as supercontinent called “Pangaea” but they “drifted apart” over time
Earth’s lithosphere is made up of several plates that move in various directions
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Plate Tectonics (cont’d.)
Seafloor spreading
Process of two plates moving away from each other
Few impacts on people where plates diverge
Huge consequences where they converge
Converging plates
Trigger some of the planet’s greatest natural hazards
Subduction (one plate “dives” below another)
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Plate Tectonics (cont’d.)
Seismic activity
Refers to Earth vibrations when plates move past one another
Earthquakes
Strength measured on the Richter Scale
Tsunamis
Volcanism
Movement of molten earth material
Generally occurs along or near subduction zones
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Tectonic Plates
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Figure 2.1 Major tectonic plates and their general direction of movement. Earthquakes, volcanoes, and other geologic events are concentrated where plates separate, collide, or slide past one another. Where they separate, rifting produces very low land elevations (well below sea level at the Dead Sea of Israel and Jordan, for example) or the emergence of new crust on the ocean floor (in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, for example). The yellow ring points to the rough outline of the “Ring of Fire.”
Source: Adapted from NASA, “Global Tectonic Activity Map of the Earth,” DTAM-1, 2002
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Generalized cross section of the Earth, showing its main concentric layers and the process by which its lithosphere is recycled.
Earth’s Interior and Its Forces
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Figure 2.2 The Earth is composed of core, mantle, and crust. Dynamic forces within the core and mantle have major effects on what happens in the crust and on the surface, including impressive but dangerous events like earthquakes and volcanoes. These forces create many of Earth’s landforms. The yellow arrows illustrate how the lithosphere is “recycled.”
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Patterns of Climate and Vegetation
Weather
Atmospheric conditions occurring at a given time & place
Climate
Average weather of an area over a long period of time
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Precipitation
Precipitation and temperature
Key variables in weather and climate
Water is essential for life on Earth
Precipitation – results from processes that cool the air to release moisture
Types include:
Rain
Snow
Sleet
Hail
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Some geographers argue that this is perhaps the most important of all maps in understanding life on earth.
World Precipitation
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Figure 2.3 World precipitation map. Is this, as some authorities say, the most important of all world maps?
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Climate
Climates – product of precipitation, temperature, latitude, and elevation
Major Köppen climate types
Ice Cap, tundra & subarctic
Desert & semiarid / steppe
Tropical rain forest & tropical savanna
Marine west cast
Mediterranean
Humid subtropical & humid continental
Undifferentiated highland climate
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World Climate Types
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Figure 2.4 World climates.
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World Biomes
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Figure 2.5 World biomes (natural vegetation) map.
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The ice cap biome is devoid of vegetation, except in very few spots where enough ice or snow melts in the summer to allow tundra vegetation to grow.
Ice Cap
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Figure 2.6o Ice cap, western Svalbard (Spitsbergen), Norway.
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Tundra vegetation is composed of mosses, lichens, shrubs, dwarfed trees, and some grasses.
Tundra
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Figure 2.6n Tundra, northern Norway.
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Desert shrub vegetation is often found only in dry riverbeds in arid climates.
Desert Shrubland
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Figure 2.6h Desert shrubland annuals in full glory following winter rains, Anza Borrego Desert State Park, southern California.
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The tropical rain forest climate is rainy and occurs at low latitudes. Heat and moisture are almost always present in the biome.
Tropical Moist Broadleaf Forest
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Figure 2.6a Tropical moist broadleaf forest (tropical rain forest) at the ancient Maya site of Tikal, northern Guatemala.
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The tropical deciduous forest thins out to low, sparse scrub and thorn forest in drier areas.
Tropical Grassland (Savanna)
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Figure 2.6i Tropical grassland (savanna), southern Kenya.
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The Mediterranean climate is characterized by rainless summers contrasted with cyclonic or orographic precipitation in the winter.
Mediterranean Scrub
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Figure 2.6g Mediterranean scrub and woodland of California’s coastal range. The Calaveras Fault lies at the boundary of San Jose’s eastern suburbs with the hills beyond.
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Temperate Mixed Forest
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Figure 2.6b Temperate broadleaf and mixed forest, northwest Florida.
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Undifferentiated Highland Vegetation
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Figure 2.6p Undifferentiated highland vegetation, San Juan Mountains, Colorado, United States. Note the timberline above which trees do not grow. Here, biomes change with elevation, and so the vegetation climate types have to be characterized as “undifferentiated” on small-scale maps.
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The Importance of Biodiversity
Biological diversity
Number of plant and animal species present and the variety of genetic materials these organisms contain
Most diverse biome is the tropical rain forest
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The Importance of Biodiversity (cont’d.)
Struggling to protect biodiversity
Human removal of rain forests and natural ecosystems deplete biodiversity
Controversy of the green revolution
Establishment of national parks and protected areas
Conservation International’s “Biodiversity Hot Spots”
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34 Priority Regions Identified by Conservation International
World Biodiversity Hotspots
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Figure 2.8 World biodiversity hotspots as recognized by Conservation International.
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Why Should We Care About Oceans?
70% of the world’s surface is water
Oceans: largest role in hydrologic cycle
Powered by Sun’s energy to move water between oceans, sky, and land
Seawater is converted into usable freshwater through evaporation and precipitation
The oceans feed us
15% of the world’s population relies primarily on fish as their source of protein
Global demand for seafood has increased 40% since 1980
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Why Should We Care About Oceans? (cont’d.)
The oceans provide energy & raw materials for human use
The oceans play important roles in trade and commerce
90% of global trade is seaborne
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Commercial Shipping Routes
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Figure 2.11 World commercial shipping routes, as mapped by the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis. Over thirty-three hundred commercial and research vessels were tracked for a year to develop this map showing where human activity on the oceans is highest.
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Global Climate Change
Human activities are responsible for a documented warming of Earth’s surface
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
United Nations-sponsored panel
Made up of 2,500 atmospheric scientists from 130+ countries
2014 report concluded that global warming is “unequivocal”
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Global Climate Change (cont’d.)
Global warming
Global mean temperature has increased 1.4 degrees F since late 19th century
Result of human production of greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide
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Carbon Dioxide Concentration
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Figure 2.12 Industrialization, the burning of tropical forests and other factors have produced a steady increase in carbon dioxide emissions. Most scientists believe that these increased emissions explain the corresponding steady increase in the global mean temperature.
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The Greenhouse Effect
Concept established in 1827 by French mathematician Jean-Baptiste Fourier
Earth’s atmosphere acts like the transparent glass cover of a greenhouse, allowing visible sunlight to pass through, and trapping some of the heat
In our atmosphere, naturally occurring greenhouse gases make earth habitable by trapping heat from sunlight
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The Greenhouse Effect (cont’d.)
Concern over global warming focuses on human-derived sources of greenhouse gases, which trap abnormal amounts of heat
Greatest source of concern is the release human-induced carbon dioxide into atmosphere
Other problematic human-produced greenhouse gases are methane, nitrous-oxide, and chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)
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The Greenhouse Effect (cont’d.)
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Figure 2.13 The greenhouse effect. Some of the solar energy radiated as heat (infrared radiation) from the Earth’s surface escapes into space, while greenhouse gases trap the rest. Naturally occurring greenhouse gases make the Earth habitable, but carbon dioxide and greenhouse gases emitted by human activities accentuate the greenhouse effect, making the planet unnaturally warmer.
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The Effects of Global Warming
Increase in global temperatures by 2°F to 7°F by 2100
More precipitation overall, but also more pronounced drought
Pronounced warming in the polar regions
Shifting biomes, with species extinction and agricultural changes
Rising sea levels
Geopolitical instability
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Global Patterns of Impacts
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Figure 2.14 Global patterns of impacts in recent decades attributed to climate change. Impacts are shown at a range of geographic scales. Symbols indicate categories of attributed impacts, the relative contribution of climate change (major or minor) to the observed impact, and confidence in attribution.
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What Can We Do About Global Climate Change?
Approaches to confronting climate change
Mitigation
Montreal Protocol – reduce CFCs
Cut emissions through market-based incentives
Clean development mechanism
Joint implementation
Cap and trade
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Increase Carbon Sequestration
Natural capture and long-term storage
Forests, farmlands, oceans
Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD)
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The Kyoto Protocol and Beyond
1992 treaty: United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
1997 Kyoto Protocol
Emission reduction targets
Extended until 2020
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