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Tectonic Boundary Conditions for Climate Reconstructions Thomas J. Crowley (Senior Research Scientist in the Department of Oceanography, Senior Research Scientist in the Department of Oceanography, Texas A&M University)

Tectonic Boundary Conditions for Climate Reconstructions By Thomas J. Crowley (Senior Research Scientist in the Department of Oceanography, Senior Research Scientist in the Department of Oceanography, Texas A&M University)

Summary

This text studies areas where solid earth geophysical studies could interact with climate studies. It devotes attention to assessing the effects of uncertainties in tectonic boundary conditions, covering such topics as: positions of continents; height of mountains; and depth of sea floor.

Tectonic Boundary Conditions for Climate Reconstructions Summary

Tectonic Boundary Conditions for Climate Reconstructions by Thomas J. Crowley (Senior Research Scientist in the Department of Oceanography, Senior Research Scientist in the Department of Oceanography, Texas A&M University)

In the last ten to fifteen years there has been a movement to break down old disciplinary boundaries in the geosciences in order to develop a more unified view of the earth as an integrated system. Much of this effort has been stimulated by developments in the atmosphere and ocean sciences that study the effect of humanity's impact on the environment. However, solid earth sciences also have a role to play in the Earth System Science/Global Change Programs but efforts to integrate solid and fluid elements of the geosciences have not progressed as rapidly as other elements of these programs. In this book, the authors present examples of how integrating solid earth and climate studies can lead to better understanding of both disciplines. The focus on the role of tectonic boundary conditions for paleoclimate reconstructions. Chapters presenting background material on the impact of tectonic changes on climate will be followed by individual chapters on the uncertainties - with respect to orography, geography, timing of ocean gatewary closures, bathymetry, and CO[2 levels in the atmosphere. The book developed from a discussion at the Geodynamics Committee of the Board on Earth Sciences and Resources of the United States National Academy of Sciences.

Tectonic Boundary Conditions for Climate Reconstructions Reviews

'This is an interesting, wide-ranging book setting out the state-of-the0art of global climatic modelling of past climates' Geological Magazine

Table of Contents

Introduction ; 1. Significance of Tectonic Boundary Conditions for Paleoclimate Simulations ; I. Role of Continental Configuration ; 2. The Role of Geography and Atmospheric CO2 in Long-Term Climate Change: Results from Model Simulations for the Late Permian to the Present ; II. Continental Elevation ; 3. Orographic Evolution of the Himalaya and Tibetan Plateau ; 4. Topographic History of the Western Cordillera of North America and Controls on Climate ; 5. Effects of Tropical Mountain Elevations on the Climate of the Late Carboniferous: Climate model Simulations ; 6. The Role of Mountains and Plateaus in a Triassic Climate Model ; III. Epeiric Seas ; 7. The Vanishing Record of Epeiric Seas, With Emphasis on the Late Cretaceous 'Hudson Seaway' ; IV. Ocean Gateways ; 8. Caribbean Constraints on Circulation Between Atlantic and Pacific Oceans Over the Past 40 Million Years ; 9. The Role of the Greenland-Scotland Ridge in Neogene Climate Changes ; 10. Opening of Drake Passage and its Impact on Cenozoic Ocean Circulation ; V. Bathymetry ; 11. Reconstruction of Realistic Early Eocene Palaeobathymetry and Ocean GCM Sensitivity Basin Configuration ; VI. Tectonics and CO2 ; 12 ; 13. The Transition from Arc Volcanism to Exhumation, Weathering of Young Ca, Mg, St Silicates, and Co 2 Drawdown

Additional information

NPB9780195112450
9780195112450
0195112458
Tectonic Boundary Conditions for Climate Reconstructions by Thomas J. Crowley (Senior Research Scientist in the Department of Oceanography, Senior Research Scientist in the Department of Oceanography, Texas A&M University)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
1999-01-07
296
N/A
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