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Essentials of the Earth's Climate System [Hardback]

(University of Colorado Boulder), (University of Colorado Boulder)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 271 pages, height x width x depth: 253x198x17 mm, weight: 780 g, Worked examples or Exercises; 20 Halftones, unspecified; 110 Halftones, color
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Mar-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1107037255
  • ISBN-13: 9781107037250
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  • Hardback
  • Cena: 113,24 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 271 pages, height x width x depth: 253x198x17 mm, weight: 780 g, Worked examples or Exercises; 20 Halftones, unspecified; 110 Halftones, color
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Mar-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1107037255
  • ISBN-13: 9781107037250
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
This concise introduction to modern climatology covers the key topics for intermediate undergraduate students on one-semester courses. The treatment of topics is non-mathematical wherever possible, instead focusing on physical processes to allow students to grasp concepts more easily. Full-color illustrations support the text and supplementary topics are covered in boxes, enabling students to further increase their knowledge and awareness. A historical perspective of climatology is woven throughout, providing students with an insight into key scientists and technological developments. Each chapter concludes with a summary of the main points and a mixture of review and discussion questions, encouraging students to check their understanding and think critically. A list of key web links to data and other resources, and solutions and hints to answers to the student questions (password-protected for instructors) are provided online to complete the teaching package.

Recenzijas

'This delightful and readable textbook covers all the topics - and then some - likely to comprise an introductory or intermediate-level college course Discussions of the forcing, form, and function of the climate system - on scales ranging from local to global - will be essential reading for university undergraduate and graduate students alike, and a helpful review for seasoned researchers in the climate and atmospheric sciences. The easy-on-the-eye text style is complemented by the many incisive color figures, maps and graphs, most of which are based on the latest analyses from satellites and global reanalysis data. Beginning and end-of-chapter overviews and summaries highlight the most important concepts and features of climatology study, while the glossary and bibliography are both comprehensive and fully up to date THE essential text on climatology destined to become a classic.' Andrew M. Carleton, Pennsylvania State University 'This textbook is a very comprehensive and informative resource for teaching and for general reference. Its layout and organization are efficient and effective, allowing a wide range of material to be covered in a surprising level of detail. The chapters focusing on 'local and microclimates', and 'circulation modes' are exceptional, covering difficult topics in a much more effective manner than typical introductory textbooks. This book has an important place in the classroom and on any Earth scientist's bookshelf.' David A. Pepper, California State University, Long Beach 'This textbook provides a comprehensive and well-illustrated overview of the climate system by experts with a wealth of experience in climate science.' Raymond S. Bradley, University of Massachusetts 'I can recommend this text, particularly for students studying an introduction to climate science at undergraduate level. The text is accessible and any mathematical treatment is clearly explained and at an introductory level. I am particularly impressed by the scope of material, with chapters on past climates, future climate modelling and applied climatology, a welcome addition to the usual material on atmospheric systems and local/regional climates. It is also great to see case studies illustrated with examples from all over the world. This book will be a comprehensive resource for all those teaching climate science at an introductory level.' Nicholas Pepin, University of Portsmouth 'Drawing on more than fifty years of combined experience in climate study, Barry and Hall-McKim give the reader a compact, non-mathematical overview of the fundamental processes of the Earth's climate system. The book is surprisingly comprehensive given its relatively brief length: coverage ranges from global to the local, from short-term phenomena to long-term climatic change. Complex topics are explained in straightforward, non-complex language, which in turn is supported by excellent color illustrations, and numerous place-specific examples are skilfully employed to illustrate general processes and concepts. Essentials of the Earth's Climate System is an ideal introduction to the topic for an upper-level undergraduate course in climate. It is likely to become the standard textbook in its field.' Thomas Krabacher, California State University, Sacramento ' an excellent introduction to climate science enabling coverage of the main issues in one semester and an inspiration for more in-depth studies. It is simple enough to be understood by geography and environmental science undergraduates without previous knowledge of climatology but not oversimplified An immense advantage of this textbook is that its first part provides excellent explanations of the very basics of climate science The authors manage to lay the foundations for more advanced studies and engage readers through the use of diverse examples from various parts of the world The authors skilfully intermingle observational data with explanations of complex processes and concepts in an engaging and easy-to-follow manner I highly recommend this book for undergraduate courses and every university library should have a copy.' Maria Shahgedanova, University of Reading ' a well-structured, lucidly written, and very well-illustrated climatology textbook. It is comprehensive, touching upon all of the fundamental elements of climate and drawing on climatic information from the earliest times to contemporary times. Its spatial approach to describing climate allows the student to appreciate the climate in which she/he lives and, simultaneously, where it fits into the global climate. The authors have made difficult subject matter at once interesting and informative. This is a book that the student new to climatology will appreciate and the teacher of climatology will welcome as an extremely useful resource.' Marilyn Raphael, Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research ' comprehensive Barry and Hall-McKim have produced a great read, and I would recommend this book wholeheartedly to anyone seeking insight into climatology in the twenty-first century.' S. John Harrison, Weather ' [ The book's] descriptions of complex phenomena are excellent. This is the result of arranging subjects progressively by chapter, and a clarity of narrative, together with a superb layout that includes well-chosen illustrations, summaries, and explanatory inset boxes Essentials of the Earth's Climate System deserves a place with meteorologists, oceanographers looking for insights into climate classification, and those working in interdisciplinary social sciences and policy fields.' J. J. P. Smith, Bulletin of the Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society

Papildus informācija

A concise, non-mathematical, full-color introduction to modern climatology, covering the key topics of climate science for intermediate undergraduate students.
Preface ix
Acknowledgments xi
1 Introduction
1(13)
1.1 Climate and weather
2(1)
1.2 Why climate matters
3(1)
1.3 Climate statistics
4(2)
1.4 History of world climatology
6(5)
1.5 The use of weather satellites
11(3)
2 The elements of climate: a global view of energy and moisture
14(33)
2.1 Energy
15(14)
(a) Solar radiation
15(3)
(b) Cloud effects
18(1)
(c) Aerosol effects
19(1)
(d) Surface receipt of solar radiation
20(1)
(e) Infrared radiation
21(2)
(f) Net radiation
23(1)
(g) Heat fluxes
23(2)
(h) Temperature
25(4)
2.2 Moisture
29(18)
(a) Vapor content, vapor pressure, relative humidity, and precipitable water
29(2)
(b) Clouds
31(1)
(c) Lightning
32(2)
(d) Precipitation
34(6)
(e) Evaporation
40(5)
(f) Visibility
45(2)
3 The elements of climate: a global view of pressure, winds, and storms
47(27)
3.1 Pressure and winds
48(11)
(a) Pressure
48(2)
(b) Winds
50(7)
(c) Horizontal moisture flux
57(2)
3.2 Air masses
59(2)
3.3 Frontal zones
61(3)
3.4 Storm frequency and tracks
64(7)
3.5 Thunderstorms
71(1)
3.6 Mesoscale convective systems
71(3)
4 Local and microclimates
74(17)
4.1 Local climate
75(4)
4.2 Forest climate
79(1)
4.3 Lake climate
80(1)
4.4 Urban climate
81(4)
(a) Pollution
82(1)
(b) Urban heat island
82(2)
(c) Moisture effects
84(1)
4.5 Microclimate
85(1)
4.6 Human bioclimatology
86(5)
5 The general circulation
91(12)
5.1 Factors
92(2)
5.2 Meridional cells and zonal winds
94(2)
5.3 Zonal wind belts
96(4)
5.4 Zonal circulations
100(3)
6 Circulation modes
103(13)
6.1 Introduction
103(1)
6.2 The Southern Oscillation and El Nino
104(5)
6.3 The North Atlantic Oscillation
109(1)
6.4 The Northern Annular Mode
109(1)
6.5 The Southern Annular Mode
110(1)
6.6 The semiannual oscillation
110(1)
6.7 The North Pacific Oscillation
110(1)
6.8 The Pacific Decadal Oscillation
111(1)
6.9 The Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation
111(1)
6.10 Southern Hemisphere wave number-three pattern
112(1)
6.11 The Madden-Julian Oscillation
112(4)
7 Synoptic climatology
116(11)
7.1 Introduction
117(1)
7.2 Regional classifications
117(5)
7.3 Continental classifications
122(1)
7.4 Hemispheric classifications
122(3)
7.5 Modern applications of synoptic climatology
125(2)
8 Land and sea effects
127(18)
8.1 Oceans
128(7)
(a) Northern Hemisphere currents
129(3)
(b) The Arctic Ocean
132(2)
(c) Southern Hemisphere currents
134(1)
(d) The Southern Ocean
134(1)
8.2 Air-sea interaction
135(3)
(a) Tropical cyclones
138(1)
8.3 Land
138(7)
9 Climatic types on land
145(27)
9.1 Classifying climates
146(1)
9.2 Major climatic types on land
146(26)
(a) Deserts
146(3)
(b) Monsoons
149(5)
(c) High plateaus
154(3)
(d) Wet lowlands
157(3)
(e) Tropical and subtropical steppe
160(1)
(f) Humid subtropical
160(1)
(g) Mediterranean
161(1)
(h) Temperate lowlands
162(2)
(i) Maritime west coasts
164(1)
(j) Mid-latitude steppe and prairie
165(1)
(k) Taiga/boreal forest
165(2)
(l) Tundra
167(1)
(m) Ice plateaus
168(4)
10 Past climates
172(22)
10.1 Geologic time
173(2)
10.2 The Cenozoic
175(1)
10.3 The Quaternary
176(10)
10.4 The Anthropocene
186(8)
11 Future climate
194(12)
11.1 Global climate models
195(1)
11.2 Projected changes
196(3)
11.3 Impacts
199(3)
11.4 Economic and socio-political issues
202(4)
12 Applied climatology
206(19)
12.1 Climatic extremes and disasters
207(2)
12.2 Climatic aspects of vegetation and soils
209(3)
12.3 Agriculture and climate
212(2)
12.4 Water resources
214(3)
12.5 Renewable energy
217(2)
12.6 Climate effects on transportation
219(1)
12.7 Insurance and climate/weather disasters
220(1)
12.8 Climate forecasts and climate services
221(4)
Appendix A Units 225(1)
Appendix B Web links 226(2)
Glossary 228(17)
Bibliography 245(10)
Index 255
Roger G. Barry worked for two years in the British Meteorological Office before attending Liverpool University where he received a BA Honours in Geography. He received an MSc in Climatology from McGill University, Montreal, and a PhD from the University of Southampton in 1965. In October 1968 he moved to the University of Colorado, Boulder to become Associate Professor of Geography, Professor (19712004) and Distinguished Professor (200410). In 1977 he became the Director of the World Data Center for Glaciology, which in 1980 merged into the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC). Roger's teaching and research has spanned climate change, Arctic and mountain climates, synoptic climatology, and snow and ice processes. Roger has published twenty textbooks, including: Atmosphere, Weather and Climate (with R. J. Chorley, 10th edition, 2010); Mountain Weather and Climate (3rd edition, Cambridge University Press, 2008), Synoptic and Dynamic Climatology (with A. M. Carleton, 2011); The Arctic Climate System (with M. C. Serreze, Cambridge University Press, 2005); The Global Cryosphere: Past, Present and Future (with T. Y. Gan, Cambridge University Press, 2011). He has also published more than 250 research articles and supervised 65 graduate students. Roger has been a Guggenheim Fellow, a Fulbright Teaching Fellow at Moscow State University, and a visiting professor in Australia, France, Germany, Japan, New Zealand, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. His honours include: Fellow, American Geophysical Union; Foreign Member's Medal, Royal Geographical Society, and Humboldt Prize Fellow. He is currently Director of the International CLIVAR Project Office at the National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, UK. Eileen Hall-McKim is a PhD Climatologist receiving her degree from the University of Colorado, Boulder. Her interdisciplinary degrees include work in the geological sciences, hydrology, oceanography, paleoclimatology and water resource research. She completed her MSc at the National Snow and Ice Data Center, Boulder and worked as editor and writer for the Intermountain West Climate Summary of the NOAA/Western Water Assessment. Her honors include: elected member Phi Beta Kappa National Honor Society; Outstanding Women in Geosciences Student Award from the American Association of Women in Geosciences; Graduate Research Fellowship Award from the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES); Magna Cum Laude National Honor Society, University of Colorado. She is currently pursuing professional certification in sustainable practices from the University of Colorado law school and environmental science department.