The Early History of the Role of Carbon Dioxide in Climate

advertisement
The Early History of the Role of Carbon Dioxide in Climate Analysis
http://www.applet-magic.com/CO2historypod.htm
applet-magic.com
Thayer Watkins
Silicon Valley
& Tornado Alley
USA
The Early History of the Role
of Carbon Dioxide in Climate Analysis
The history of carbon dioxide and climate usually starts with the Swedish scientist, Svante
Arrhenius, who in 1896 published a paper arguing that increased levels of carbon dioxide
could raise global temperatures. He was primarily concerned with this as a factor that might
prevent the Earth falling into another ice age. Other scientists considered Arrhenius' assertion
and rejected it on the basis their belief that carbon dioxide did not absorb any wavelength of
radiation that was not also absorbed by water vapor. The level of carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere is so small compared to the level of water vapor that if it only duplicates the effect
of water vapor its effect would be insignificant. Given the presumption that carbon dioxide
did not absorb any wavelengths that were not absorbed by water vapor the conclusion that
increased carbon dioxide levels could not affect the atmospheric temperatures of the Earth
was inescapable. Therefore for forty to fifty years there was a scientific consensus, subscribed
to by thousands of scientists, that carbon dioxide could not affect Earth's temperatures. So
much for the consensus of scientists!
1 of 11
8/1/08 2:45 PM
The Early History of the Role of Carbon Dioxide in Climate Analysis
http://www.applet-magic.com/CO2historypod.htm
It was not until the late 1930's that this consensus was challenged. The British researcher,
Guy Callendar, working at the Ministry of Supply in London began publishing papers in
science journals on the issue. Callendar first compiled temperature statistics for different
regions and concluded that there had been increases in temperature. His statistics (Callendar,
1961), shown below, are almost pathetic by modern standards, but he is thought to have
made a plausible case that temperature had increased over the 1885-1950 interval of his data
by something on the order of ½°C.
The data plotted in the graph are the deviations from the average for five-year moving
averages. Of the five regions shown above only the British Isles, New Zealand and Turkestan
showed a temperature increase.
Here is the graph of the temperatures in Central England over the same period. The
temperatures at the end of the interval were declining rather than increasing.
2 of 11
8/1/08 2:45 PM
The Early History of the Role of Carbon Dioxide in Climate Analysis
http://www.applet-magic.com/CO2historypod.htm
It is also notable that the temperatures prior to the interval used by Calendar, say 1830, were
significantly higher than those of the starting year of 1850 that he used. The temperature in
1960 was not any higher than the temperature in 1830.
It is notable that the temperature records for the U.S. or any region there of were not
included by Callendar in his analysis.
Callendar then presented his temperature data by broad zonal regions.
3 of 11
8/1/08 2:45 PM
The Early History of the Role of Carbon Dioxide in Climate Analysis
http://www.applet-magic.com/CO2historypod.htm
Of the six regions one, the western Pacific, did not have a significant change. For two, the
Ocean Islands and Africa, the change was about a quarter degree Celsius. Again it is notable
that North America did not seem to have quality temperature records.
Amazingly the temperature trends all over the world were, according to Callendar's results,
remarkably the same.
4 of 11
8/1/08 2:45 PM
The Early History of the Role of Carbon Dioxide in Climate Analysis
http://www.applet-magic.com/CO2historypod.htm
There was however a greater temperature change for the sub-Arctic than for the Tropics
region.
The final results are remarkably uniform and smooth.
5 of 11
8/1/08 2:45 PM
The Early History of the Role of Carbon Dioxide in Climate Analysis
http://www.applet-magic.com/CO2historypod.htm
The proponents of the carbon dioxide theory of global warming seem to be like the Canadian
Royal Mounted Police who, not matter how tough the territory, always get their man. The
CO2 proponents, not matter how rough the data, always seem to get the result they are
looking for.
After having established the global temperature trend Callendar then examined the possible
explanations for the global warming he found. The prime candidate at that time was an
increase in the intensity of radiation from the Sun. This intensity had been increasing and the
past correlation looked impressive, as is seen from below.
6 of 11
8/1/08 2:45 PM
The Early History of the Role of Carbon Dioxide in Climate Analysis
http://www.applet-magic.com/CO2historypod.htm
Callendar rejected this explanation. He considered the possibility of changed levels of dust in
the atmosphere, such as from volcanoes, and rejected this as well. He then concluded it had to
be the level of carbon dioxide. At the time Callendar was writing it was not well established
that the level of carbon dioxide had increased. The concentration of carbon dioxide is so small
that it was very difficult to find historical measurements of sufficient precision and accuracy
to establish that there had been an increase. The graph below, for Fonselius et al(1956) shows
the measurement record at the time Callendar was writing.
7 of 11
8/1/08 2:45 PM
The Early History of the Role of Carbon Dioxide in Climate Analysis
http://www.applet-magic.com/CO2historypod.htm
Callendar had to reject most of the past measurements. He was undoubtably correct but it is
a dangerous proposition for a researcher to be able to select data that fits his hypothesis and
8 of 11
8/1/08 2:45 PM
The Early History of the Role of Carbon Dioxide in Climate Analysis
http://www.applet-magic.com/CO2historypod.htm
reject all data that does not fit. Such a procedure can be used to prove anything.
The picture that Callendar presented (Callendar, 1958) was much more orderly than the full
record:
Again like a Royal Mounty, Callendar got the result he was looking for.
Callendar did not make a rigorous case for the role of carbon dioxide in increasing global
temperature. His results for the British Isles seem to have come from the careful selection of
the data interval. He used data of dubious accuracy from such places as Turkestan. However
about the same time that he was writing physicists were getting more accurate measurements
of the absorption spectrum of carbon dioxide. They found that carbon dioxide absorbed
infrared radiation in a band of wavelengths around 15 microns (micrometers) which is not
absorbed by water vapor.
9 of 11
8/1/08 2:45 PM
The Early History of the Role of Carbon Dioxide in Climate Analysis
http://www.applet-magic.com/CO2historypod.htm
A Johns Hopkins University researcher, Gilbert N. Plass, took this information and made
calculations to show that increased levels of carbon dioxide could raise atmospheric
temperature. It was this research that convinced climatologists that carbon dioxide could
affect climate. Water vapor and carbon dioxide are both greenhouse gases but the crucial
thing is that they are not exactly equivalent. Carbon dioxide does not just increase the
saturation of the absorption by water vapor in the wavelength bands where their spectra
overlap; it blocks a window in the atmosphere which is not blocked by water vapor. There
needs to be a more refined terminology. Labeling water vapor and carbon dioxide as merely
greenhouse gases obscures the issue. Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas with a difference.
There are places on Earth where an increase in CO2 would have a large impact; i.e., those
places with very little water vapor in the atmosphere. These are roughly speaking the desert
areas but this is not precise enough. Deserts are defined in terms of a lack of precipitation but
there are some deserts that have a degree of humidity but it not get precipitated out. The
10 of 11
8/1/08 2:45 PM
The Early History of the Role of Carbon Dioxide in Climate Analysis
http://www.applet-magic.com/CO2historypod.htm
polar areas are deserts from a lack of precipitation but the air there is in contact with ice and
snow and sublimation keeps a degree of humidity in the air. The deserts where an increase in
CO2 would have a more significant impact are those where summer temperatures prevent
any preservation of snow and ice. Such areas exists in central Siberia and northwest Canada
and it is these two regions which account for an inordinate amount of the increase in the
average global temperature.
Sources:
Guy S. Callendar, "Temperature fluctuations and trends over the Earth," Quarterly Journal
of the Royal Meteorological Society, vol. 87, no. 371 (January 1961), pp. 1-12.
Guy S. Callendar, "On the Amount of Carbon Dioxide in the Atmosphere," Tellus, vol. 10,
no. 2 (1958), pp. 243-248.
Gilbert N. Plass, "The Carbon Dioxide Theory of Climate Change," Tellus, vol. 8, no. 2
(1956), pp. 140-154.
Stig Fonselius, Folke Koroleff and Karl-Erik Wärme, "Carbon Dioxide Variations in the
Atmosphere," Tellus, vol. 8, no. 2 (1956), 176-183.
HOME PAGE OF applet-magic
HOME PAGE OF Thayer Watkins
11 of 11
8/1/08 2:45 PM
Download