DEPARTMENT OF
GEOGRAPHY-GEOLOGY
Catalog Description:
CLIMATE AND GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE 3 S
GEO 204; GEO 200 or GEO 211; GEO 201 req. or cons inst
req.
An overview of concepts, methods, theory and debates surrounding climate and global environmental change.
Course Overview:
This is a course on the
concepts, methods, science and controversy behind climate and global
environmental change. Students will gain
an appreciation for the complexity of the discussions that surround climate and
environmental change, and why these may be some of the most pressing issues
facing our society in the coming decades.
Instructor: Dr. Dagmar Budikova
Class Time: MWF 12:00-12:50 am in FHS 216
Office: Felmley Hall Annex 430
E-Mail: dbudiko@ilstu.edu
Student Objectives/Outcomes:
Through successful completion of GEO 341, students have the opportunity to:
Class Structure:
Students will meet with the instructor for 3 hours each week. Two of those hours will be dedicated to presenting new material through lectures, and 1 hour will be dedicated to discussion of scientific literature on related topics.
Required Student Tasks/Assignments:
This is a reading-intensive course. During the semester students will be required to write one research essay (15-20 pages) on a suggested topic relevant to global climate change. Students will be given one midterm examination that will cover the material introduced during lecture and discussion sessions. The final examination will be similar to the midterm test and will be comprehensive. Students will be required to read scientific articles assigned to them each week and prepare critical reviews and summaries of these works. These readings will then be central to the discussion sessions, held once each week (see schedule below for details).
Required text:
Robinson P. J.,
and A. Henderson-Sellers. 1999. Contemporary Climatology. Second Edition. Prentice Hall.
Literature for class
discussion (see syllabus for details):
Alley, R. B., J. Marotzke, W. D. Nordhaus, J. T. Overpeck, D. M. Peteet, R. A. Pielke Fr., R. T. Pierrehumbert, p. B. Rhines, T. F. Stocker, L. D. Talley, J. M. Wallace. (2003). Abrupt climate change. Science. 299: 2005-2010.
Bryson, R. A. (1997). The Paradigm of Climatology: An Essay. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 78: 449-455.
Free, M., A. Robock. (1999). Global warming in the context of the Little Ice Age. Journal of Geophysical Research. 104: D16: 19057-19070.
Hansen, B., S. Osterhus, D. Quadfasel, W. Turrell. (2004). Already the day after tomorrow? Science. 305: 953-954.
Kerr, R. A. (2005). Confronting the bogeyman of climate system. Science: 310: 432-433.
King, D. A. (2004). Climate change science: Adapt, mitigate, or ignore? Science. 303: 176-177.
Kunkel, K. E., R. A. Peilke Jr., S. A. Changnon. (1999). Temporal fluctuations in weather and climate extremes that cause economic and human health impacts: A review. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 80: 1077-1098.
Landsea, C. W., J. A. Knaff. (2000). How much skill was there in forecasting the very strong 1997-98 El Nino? Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 81: 2107-2120.
Leathers, D.J.,
Yarnal, B. and Palecki, M.A. 1991 The Pacific/North American teleconnection
pattern and
O’Brien, K. L., and Leichenko, R. M. (2003). Winners and Losers in the context of global change. Annals of the Association of American Geographers. 93: 89-103.
Ramanathan, V, P. J. Crutzen, J. T. Kiehl, D. Rosenfeld. (2001). Aerosols, climate, and the hydrological cycle. Science: 294: 2119-2123.
Rosenzweig, Cynthia, Ana Iglesias, X.B. Yang, Paul R. Epstein, and Eric Chivian. 2001. Climate change and extreme weather events; Implications for food production, plant diseases, and pests. Global Change & Human Health, Vol. 2, No. 2, pp. 90-104.
Wunsch, C. (2002). What is the thermohaline circulation? Science. 298: 1179-1181.
Grading Scheme:
Mid-term exam 15%
Final Exam - Comprehensive 15%
10 literature summaries 20%
Class research paper 30%
· Written report (70%)
· Class presentation (30%)
Discussion participation 20%
Final grade
assignments:
Less than 60 = F;
60 and above = D;
70 and above = C;
80 and above = B;
90 and above = A
COURSE SYLLABUS* |
||||
|
Week |
Week of |
Task |
Text |
Discussion for Fridays |
|
1 |
Jan 16th |
Introduction to climate science: scope and controls |
|
Bryson (1997) |
|
2 |
Jan 23rd |
Earth’s energy budget – terrestrial radiation; global radiation budgets; Library visit & rankings of topics for research paper |
|
|
|
3 |
Jan 30th |
Precipitation measures, global precipitation distribution, surface water budget |
|
Ramanathan et al. (2001) |
|
4 |
Feb 6th |
General circulation, permanent and semi-permanent features, large-scale effects of surface boundary |
|
Wunsch (2002) Kerr (2005) Hansen et al. (2004) |
|
5 |
Feb 13th |
Tropical climates – ENSO, the ITCZ, the monsoons, hurricanes |
|
Landsea and Knaff (2000) |
|
6 |
Feb 20th |
Extratropical climates – Rossby waves, polar fronts and jets, cyclones and anticyclones, airmasses |
|
Leathers et al. (1991) |
|
7 |
Feb 27th |
Extratropical climates continued |
|
|
|
8 |
Mar 6th |
Mid-term Exam – no
lecture this week Human interaction with climate continued – human response to climate, physiological responses, bio-meteorological indices, climate and health, urban climates |
|
Kunkel et al. (1999) |
|
9 |
Mar 13th |
SPRING
BREAK |
||
|
10 |
Mar 20th |
Human interaction with climate continued – impact of humans on climates – deforestation, air pollution and acid rain, ozone depletion, desertification |
|
Rosenzweig et al. (2001) |
|
11 |
Mar 27th |
Climate history and drivers |
|
Little Ice Age Movie Free and Robock (1999) |
|
12 |
Apr 3rd |
Climate history and drivers continued Term paper due |
|
Alley et al. (2002) |
|
13 |
Apr 10th |
Climate modeling |
|
|
|
14 |
Apr 17th |
Future climates |
|
O’Brien and Leichenko (2003) |
|
15 |
Apr 24th |
Future climates; Paper presentations (Wednesday and Friday) |
|
|
|
16 |
May 1st |
Paper presentations
(all week) |
|
|
*Any component of this schedule is subject to change with notice.
Topics for class
research paper:
General Instructions:
Paper objective: The objective of your term paper will be to provide a literature review/ synthesis of one of the general topics below. The general topics suggested below should be only used as a guide in helping you focus the final research questions you wish to concentrate on.
Paper format: formal research paper (see any scientific paper for general format)
Paper length: 15 pages double spaced for undergraduates; 20 pages double-spaced for graduate students
Number of references: 15 scientific articles or published books for undergraduate students; 20 scientific articles for graduate students (maximum of 5 from the internet unless otherwise suggested)
Presentation format: web site or power point or poster
Presentation delivery: In class during last two weeks of class; for bonus points during undergraduate research symposium
Relevant literature for research papers:
Changnon,
S. A. et al. 2005. Climate Atlas of
Croley II, Thomas
E., Frank H. Quinn, Kenneth E. Kunkel, and
Dennis P.
Lettenmaier, Andrew W. Wood, Richard N. Palmer, Eric F. Wood, and Eugene Z.
Stakhiv. 1999. "Water Resources Implications of Global Warming: A
Drake, F. 2000. Global Warming. The Science of Climate Change.
Elliott, W. P. and Angel, J.K. (1997).
Variations of cloudiness, precipitable water, and relative humidity over
the
Fleming, J.R. (1998). Historical
perspectives on climate change.
Houghton, J.T., Ding, Y., Griggs, D.J.,
Noguer, M., van der Linden, P.J., Dai, X., Maskell, K., and Johnson, C. A.
(eds). (2001). Climate Change 2001: The Scientific Basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the Third
Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change.
Jones, P.D., New, M., Parker, D. E., Martin, S., and Rigor, J.G. (1999). Surface air temperature and its change over the past 150 years. Reviews of Geophysics. 37: 173-199.
Kalkstein, L.S., Yarnal, B.M., and Scheraga, J.D. (eds). (1998). Regional assessments of climate change and policy implications. Climate Research. 11 (1).
Karl, T.R., and Trenberth, K.E. (1999). The human impact on climate. Scientific American. 281: 100-105.
Karl, T.R., Nicholls, N., and Gregory, J. (1997). The coming climate. Scientific American. 279: 78-83.
Karoly, D. J. (2003). Ozone and climate change. Science. 302: 236-237.
Karoly, D. J., K. Braganza, P. A. Stott, J. M. Arblaster, G. A. Meehl, A. J. Broccoli, K. W. Dixon. (2003). Detection of a human influence on North American Climate. Science. 302: 1200-1203.
Kerr, R. A. (2004). A few good climate shifters. Science. 305: 599-600.
Kiehl, J.T., and Trenberth, K.E. (1997). Earth’s annual global mean energy budget. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 78: 197-208.
Loáiciga, H.A. 2003. "Climate Change and Ground Water," Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Vol. 93, No. 1, March, pp. 30-41.
Milly, P. C. D., R. T. Wetherald, K. A. Dunne, and T. L. Delworth. 2002. "Increasing risk of great floods in a changing climate," Nature, Vol. 415, 31 January, pp. 514 - 517.
National Assessment Synthesis Team. (2000).
Climate Change Impacts on the
Oreskes, N. (2004). The scientific consensus on climate change. Science. 306: 1686-1687.
Ott, H.E. (1998). The Kyoto Protocol: Unfinished business. Environment. 40: 18-20; 41-45.
Patz, Jonathan A. and R. Sari Kovats. 2002. "Hotspots in climate change and human health," British Medical Journal, Vol. 325, 9 November, pp. 1094-1098.
Pearce, F. (1997). Greenhouse wars. New Scientist. July: 38-43.
Pearson, P.N., and Palmer, M.R. (2000). Atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations over the past 60 million years. Nature. 406: 695-699.
Pielke, R. A. Sr. (2005). Land use and climate change. Science: 310: 1625-1626.
Priem, H.N.A. (1997). CO2 and climate: A geologist’s view. Space Science Review. 81: 173-198.
Schneider, D. (1997). The rising seas. Scientific American. 279: 112-117.
Schnur, Reiner. 2002. "Climate science: The investment forecast," Nature, 31 January, Vol. 415, pp. 483 - 484.
Skelnikoff, E. (1999).
The role of science in policy:
The climate change debate in the
Vörösmarty, Charles J., Pamela Green, Joseph Salisbury, and Richard B. Lammers. 2000. "Global Water Resources: Vulnerability from Climate Change and Population Growth," Science, Vol. 289, 14 July, pp. 284-288.
Whyte,