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Letters
Cause and Effect in Global WarmingI read Phillip Morrison's review of Spencer R. Weart's book, The Discovery of Global Warming, in the June 2004 issue of Physics Today(page 60). Weart's book contains four graphics and other evidence that apparently convinces Morrison of global warming's causes. There is evidence of increasing global temperatures and increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations. Morrison is convinced that one causes the other but never mentions whether Weart says which is the cause and which the effect, or whether he gives evidence to support either case. Solid science, though, does support one case. It is widely known that the largest single repository of CO2 on Earth is the oceans, and that the solubility of CO2 in water drops as the water temperature increases. So clearly a mechanism exists whereby increasing ocean water temperatures (which is where most of the solar energy goes) causes increased outgassing of CO2 into the atmosphere. Furthermore, Arctic permafrost zones revert to marshy peat bogs when the Arctic warms, and then bacterial activity takes hold and converts decaying ancient vegetation into atmospheric CO2. Both of those processes are happening right now. The Russian Vostok ice cores going back 420 000 years and the Dome-C ice cores going back 730 000 years show that the Antarctic ice sheet has not melted during that time frame, even in the warmest interglacial periods. The ice cores also show periods of rapid global warming accompanied by rapidly increasing atmospheric CO2. Now we know that our sport-utility vehicles did not cause all those CO2 increases back then, but we do understand how global warming causes them. So perhaps Weart can tell us conclusively which of the two is the cause and which the effect; the ice cores seem to give us the answer. By the way, when floating sea ice melts, Archimedes would insist that the level does not change; in particular, it does not go up. That takes care of gravitational energy, but the melting of all that sea ice extracts astronomical quantities of latent heat from the surrounding ocean water and lowers the mean ocean temperature; so the level will go down, not up. And I can suggest a very illuminating experiment for anyone who believes that heat to melt sea ice does not come from the surrounding ocean. George E. Smith
Sunnyvale, California
Weart replies: Earth's climate system involves many basic phenomena—science teachers should note how that could be used to spark interest! George Smith's letter shows some ways a temperature rise can cause CO2 emissions. Such feedbacks are worrisome, because they could accelerate warming once it is initiated. What initiated the current warming? It took many decades for scientists to agree on the most likely answer.1 The crucial observation was the recent atmospheric CO2 increase, whose rate and magnitude are vastly beyond anything in the ice core record. The steep climb neatly matches calculations of the rise expected from the known consumption of fossil fuels. The calculations include estimates of gas exchanges with the oceans, tundra, forests, and so forth: estimates checked through many measurements—for example, of carbon isotopes. The oceans are found to be a net absorber, transporting carbon into their depths. Net biosphere output, although harder to estimate, is certainly dominated at present by emissions due to human activities.2 Sea ice will melt provided the greenhouse effect adds enough energy to the planet to warm the seawater even while the ice melts. A temperature increase has been observed, and will bring sea-level rise through thermal expansion. 1. Spencer Weart, The Discovery
of Global Warming, Harvard U. Press, Cambridge,
MA (2003). For additional material, see http://www.aip.org/history/climate.
2. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change, Climate Change 2001: The Scientific Basis,
J. T. Houghton et al., eds., Cambridge U. Press,
New York (2001), online at http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar.
Spencer Weart
American Institute of Physics
College Park, Maryland
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