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Physical Geography Part 3 Script Hello! Today we’re going to be taking a look at how human interaction has affected the atmosphere causing ozone depletion due to chlorofluorocarbons (we call CFC’s for short) which have caused ozone depletion, most noticeably at the poles. This has led to an international outcry for change which culminated in the universal acceptance of the Montreal Protocol stopping the use of CFC gases by all countries represented in the United Nations. Before we cover those topics, I would like to recap on what we have learned in the last lecture. In the last lecture we covered the composition of the atmosphere. In general, whenever we refer to a general layer, we call it by the sphere name for example: the troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, thermosphere, and exosphere. When we are concerned with the top of the layer or the area between layers, we refer to the pause name for example: Tropopause, stratopause, mesopause, and thermopause. It has been a general rule until recently that temperature decreases with increasing altitude. This is only true in the troposphere, however, when we get into the stratosphere, the temperature increases with increasing altitude, then in the mesosphere, the temperature decreases with increasing altitude, and finally, when our altitude ascends higher into the thermosphere the temperature increases beyond 120⁰ Fahrenheit. The atmosphere is primarily composed of the following gases which remain constant: Nitrogen78%, oxygen21%, and Argon1%. It’s also important not to forget about the effect of water vapor in the troposphere which by the way water vapor cannot ascend higher than the troposphere due to the fact that the temperature drops below freezing so you will not even find a wisp of cloud beyond the troposphere. Water vapor can make up about 4% of the volume of the atmosphere over areas like the tropics. However, in deserts and polar areas, water vapor makes up a fraction of 1%. Human-Induced Atmosphere Change As world population grows and the use of industrial technology intensifies, human activity has increasingly had unintended and uncontrolled effects on the atmosphere—effects seen around the globe. This human impact, in simplest terms, consists of the introduction of impurities into the atmosphere at a pace previously unknown—impurities capable of altering global climate or harming forms of life. Although for many years a concern of atmospheric scientists, over the last decade especially, the consequences of human produced changes in the atmosphere—especially global climate change—have received international attention from not only the scientific community but from the general public as well. In June 2009, the United States Global Change Research Program, a joint scientific effort involving more than a dozen federal agencies and the White House, issued its latest report, entitled Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States. Building on the findings of the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the report offers a candid assessment of climate change in the United States: “Climate change is apparent now across our nation. Trends observed in recent decades include rising temperature, increasing heavy downpours, rising sea level, longer growing seasons, reductions in snow and ice, and changes in the amounts and timing of river flows. These trends are projected to continue, with larger changes resulting from higher amounts of heat-trapping gas emissions, and smaller changes from lower amounts of these emissions. The observed changes in climate are already causing a wide range of impacts, and these impacts are expected to grow.”1 Depletion of the Ozone Layer: About 90% of the Ozone layer is primarily situated in the stratosphere where it functions as a shield and absorbs ultraviolet radiation protecting life here on Earth. Prolonged exposure to UV radiation is linked to skin cancer—both the generally curable nonmelanoma varieties as well as much more serious melanoma; it is also linked to increased risk for cataracts; it can suppress the human immune system, diminish the yields of many crops, disrupt the aquatic food chain by killing microorganisms such as phytoplankton on the ocean surface, and may have other negative effects still undiscovered. Scientists have discovered that the Ozone Layer has a hole and the size of that hole has been increasing. The reason for the hole in the Ozone Layer is caused by Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). These CFCs are widely used in refrigeration and air-conditioning (the cooling liquid Freon is a CFC), in foam, and plastic manufacturing, and in aerosol sprays. Although extremely stable and inert in the lower atmosphere, CFCs are broken down by ultraviolet radiation once they reach the ozonesphere. Under the influence of UV radiation, a chlorine atom is released from a CFC molecule; the chlorine atom then reacts with ozone, breaking it apart to form one chlorine monoxide (CIO) molecule and one O₂ molecule. The chlorine monoxide molecule can then react with a free atom of oxygen, forming a diatomic oxygen molecule while freeing the chlorine atom to react with another ozone molecule. As many as 100,000 ozone molecules can be destroyed for every chlorine atom released. 2 Scientist have used a computer system called TOMS (Total Ozone Mapping Spectormeter) to monitor ozone levels throughout the world since 1979. A hole has been discovered in the Antarctic and a whole 1 Hess, Darrel, and Tom L. McKnight. "Chapter 3: Introduction to the Atmosphere." McKnight's physical geography: a landscape appreciation. 10. ed., international ed. Boston: Prentice Hall, 2011. 54. Print. 2 Hess, Darrel, and Tom L. McKnight. "Chapter 3: Introduction to the Atmosphere." McKnight's physical geography: a landscape appreciation. 10. ed., international ed. Boston: Prentice Hall, 2011. 55. Print. has been discovered in the Arctic in 1980; so why is it the case that it’s the poles that have larger areas of ozone depletion in comparison to other areas of the world? This is due to the extreme cooling that goes on in the poles and in particular the Antarctic during the winter. There are polar vortexes which are whirling wind patterns that occur here which isolates polar air in the atmosphere which forms ice crystals in the stratosphere which form thin clouds called polar stratospheric clouds (PSC). These clouds can accelerate the process of ozone destruction. The surface of the ice crystals provide an area where a number of reactions can occur including the accumulation of chlorine based molecules. Stratosphereic ozone depletion has been correlated with increased levels of ultraviolet radiation reaching ground level in Antarctica, Australia, mountainous regions of Europe, central Canada, and New Zealand.3 The Montreal Protocol These discoveries were sufficiently alarming that a number of countries including the United States banned the use of CFCs in aerosol Sprays in 1978. A major international treaty—the Montreal Protocol on Substances That Deplete the Ozone Layer—was negotiated in 1987 to set time tables for phasing out the production of the major ozone-depleting substances. More than 189 countries, including all major producers of ozone-depleting substances, have ratified the proposal. Following stipulations of the treaty and its more recent amendments, the industrialized countries of the world had banned CFC production by 1996. Moreover, the protocol signatories pledged a fund of more than $700 million to help developing countries implement alternatives to CFCs and end their production by 2010. Even with the Montreal Protocol fully implemented, the ozone layer will not recover immediately because the reservoir of CFCs in the atmosphere may persist for 50 or 100 years. The largest measurable Antarctic ozone hole was observed in 2006, and since then it appears that ozone loss is stabilizing. However, some studies suggest that it may be 2050 before recovery is well under way. Addressing the depletion of the ozone layer is considered by many scientists to be an example of an environmental success story: a human-produced problem was identified, and a global strategy was implemented to counteract it. In 2009, an international team of scientists led by NASA’s Paul Newman used computer models to predict what would have happened if CFC use had not been curtailed by the Montreal Protocol. Their study suggested that without the ban on CFC use, by the year 2100 ozone levels over the tropics would have collapsed to levels found today in the Arctic and Antarctic—resulting in summertime UV radiation levels more than three times greater than what is considered “very high” today.4 Today we have covered the effect that humans have on the atmosphere and the positive and negative consequences that result from those effects. The chlorofluorocarbons which had been used in aerosols and in Freon which is used in refrigerators have harmed the ozone layer; in particular the ozone layer over the poles had received the most damage. This led to an international action culminating in the Montreal Protocols which banned the use of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) in the world. It’s interesting to 3 Hess, Darrel, and Tom L. McKnight. "Chapter 3: Introduction to the Atmosphere." McKnight's physical geography: a landscape appreciation. 10. ed., international ed. Boston: Prentice Hall, 2011. 55. Print. 4 Hess, Darrel, and Tom L. McKnight. "Chapter 3: Introduction to the Atmosphere." McKnight's physical geography: a landscape appreciation. 10. ed., international ed. Boston: Prentice Hall, 2011. 57. Print. note that this is the only treaty which had received unanimous agreement in the world. As a result, the ozone layer is beginning to stabilize. In the next lecture we are going to dive into the controls of weather and climate.