
Science Resources RSS Feeds
|
 |
 |
 |
Scientists outline planetary boundaries: A safe operating space for humanity
September 24, 2009
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) -- New approaches are needed to help humanity deal with climate change and other global environmental threats that lie ahead in the 21st century, according to a group of 28 internationally renowned scientists. The scientists propose that global biophysical boundaries, identified on the basis of the scientific understanding of the earth system, can define a "safe planetary operating space" that will allow humanity to continue to develop and thrive for generations to come. This new approach to sustainable development is conveyed in the current issue of the scientific journal Nature. The authors have made a first attempt to identify and quantify a set of nine planetary boundaries, including climate change, freshwater use, biological diversity, and aerosol loading.
The research was performed by a working group at UC Santa Barbara's National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS), in cooperation with the Stockholm Resilience Centre at Stockholm University.
One important strand of the research behind this article is based in the global project known as IHOPE. The goal of the Integrated History and future Of People on Earth (IHOPE) project is to understand the interactions of the environmental and human process over the ten to hundred millennia to determine how human and biophysical changes have contributed to Earth system dynamics. The IHOPE working group is assembled at NCEAS today.
The scientists emphasize that the rapid expansion of human activities since the industrial revolution has now generated a global geophysical force equivalent to some of the great forces of nature.
"We are entering the Anthropocene, a new geological era in which our activities are threatening the earth's capacity to regulate itself," said co-author Will Steffen, professor at the Australian National University (ANU) and director of the ANU Climate Change Institute. "We are beginning to push the planet out of its current stable Holocene state, the warm period that began about 10,000 years ago and during which agriculture and complex societies, including our own, have developed and flourished. The expanding human enterprise could undermine the resilience of the Holocene state, which would otherwise continue for thousands of years into the future."
Robert Costanza, director of the Gund Institute at the University of Vermont and one of the IHOPE project leaders at NCEAS, said: "Human history has traditionally been cast in terms of the rise and fall of great civilizations, wars, and specific human achievements. This history leaves out the important ecological and climate contexts that shaped and mediated these events. Human history and earth system history have traditionally been developed independently, with little interaction among the academic communities. The Nature article provides evidence of the necessities to establish a thorough, long-term historical understanding of the exchange between human societies and the earth system, in order to set standards for safe navigation within planetary boundaries and avoid crossing dangerous thresholds."
Planetary boundaries is a way of thinking that will not replace politics, economics, or ethics, explained environmental historian Sverker Sörlin of the Stockholm Resilience Centre and the Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm. "But it will help tell all of us where the dangerous limits are and therefore when it is ethically unfair to allow more emissions of dangerous substances, further reduction of biodiversity, or to continue the erosion of the resource base. It provides the ultimate guardrails that can help societies to take action politically, economically. Planetary boundaries should be seen both as signals of the need for caution and as an encouragement to innovation and new thinking of how to operate safely within these boundaries while at same time securing human well being for all."
Lead author Johan Rockström, director of the Stockholm Resilience Centre at Stockholm University, said: "The human pressure on the Earth System has reached a scale where abrupt global environmental change can no longer be excluded. To continue to live and operate safely, humanity has to stay away from critical 'hard-wired' thresholds in Earth's environment, and respect the nature of the planet's climatic, geophysical, atmospheric and ecological processes. Transgressing planetary boundaries may be devastating for humanity, but if we respect them we have a bright future for centuries ahead."
University of California - Santa Barbara
|
 |

|
The Atmospheric Boundary Layer (Cambridge Atmospheric and Space Science Series)
by J. R. Garratt (Author)
A comprehensive and lucid account of the physics and dynamics of the lowest one to two kilometers of the Earth's atmosphere in direct contact with the Earth's surface, known as the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL). Dr. Garratt emphasizes the application of the ABL problems to numerical modeling of the climate, which makes this book unique among recent texts on the subject. He begins with a brief introduction to the ABL before leading to the development of mean and turbulence equations and the many scaling laws and theories that are the cornerstone of any serious ABL treatment. Modeling of the ABL is crucially dependent for its realism on the surface boundary conditions, so chapters four and five deal with aerodynamic and energy considerations, with attention given to both dry and...
|
|
|
THE PLANETARY BOUNDARY LAYER OF THE ATMOSPHERE
by F. Wippermann (Author)
|
![Modelling planetary boundary layer ozone, using meteorological parameters at Uccle and Payerne [An article from: Atmospheric Environment]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51C4M48N0CL._SL160_.jpg)
|
Modelling planetary boundary layer ozone, using meteorological parameters at Uccle and Payerne [An article from: Atmospheric Environment]
by A.W. Delcloo (Author), H. De Backer (Author)
This digital document is a journal article from Atmospheric Environment, published by Elsevier in . The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description: Planetary boundary layer (PBL) ozone densities, retrieved from ozone soundings at Uccle (Belgium) and Payerne (Switzerland) between 1990 and 2000 are analysed. This PBL ozone is representative on a regional scale, also in highly polluted areas. At Uccle the yearly cycle of PBL ozone shows late spring and summer maxima, while in Payerne one broad summer maximum with peak in July is present. An overall and a composite multiple linear regression model has been built using meteorological and NO"x data as independent...
|
![A parameterization of wave stress in the planetary boundary layer for use in mesoscale models [An article from: Atmospheric Environment]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51C4M48N0CL._SL160_.jpg)
|
A parameterization of wave stress in the planetary boundary layer for use in mesoscale models [An article from: Atmospheric Environment]
by C.J. Nappo (Author), H.Y. Chun (Author), H.J. Lee (Author)
This digital document is a journal article from Atmospheric Environment, published by Elsevier in 2004. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description: A parameterization of gravity wave stress generated by subgrid-scale topography is described and tested in a one-dimensional version of the Advanced Regional Prediction System (ARPS) model. It is argued that in the planetary boundary layer (PBL) where wave reflections occur, the so-called WKB method for evaluating wave stress may not be applicable. Gravity waves launched by a subgrid-scale Gaussian ridge are calculated on line using a linear wave model. The total flow is constrained to be convectively stable...
|
|
|
Planetary Boundary Layer (Technical note - World Meteorological Organization ; no. 165)
by G. A. McBean (Editor)
|
![Semi-analytical model for pollution dispersion in the planetary boundary layer [An article from: Atmospheric Environment]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51C4M48N0CL._SL160_.jpg)
|
Semi-analytical model for pollution dispersion in the planetary boundary layer [An article from: Atmospheric Environment]
by D.M. Moreira (Author), U. Rizza (Author), M.T. Vilhena (Author), A. Goulart (Author)
This digital document is a journal article from Atmospheric Environment, published by Elsevier in 2005. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description: In this paper a time dependent semi-analytical model is discussed which overcomes the limits of the existing analytical ones. This model is compared both with the results of a numerical model and with experimental data in air quality applications. This approach is based on the Laplace transform technique, and can include both advanced eddy diffusivity and wind profiles. The numerical algorithm utilizes a mixed cubic-spline/Crank-Nicholson method within the locally one-dimensional (LOD) technique. The two...
|

|
Estimating the Height of the Planetary Boundary Layer for Diffusion- Transport Models: A Four Algorithm Comparison
by Robert L. Russ (Author)
This is a AIR FORCE INST OF TECH WRIGHT-PATTERSONAFB OH SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING report procured by the Pentagon and made available for public release. It has been reproduced in the best form available to the Pentagon. It is not spiral-bound, but rather assembled with Velobinding in a soft, white linen cover. The Storming Media report number is A854163. The abstract provided by the Pentagon follows: Diffusion-Transport (D-T) modeling is a branch of numerical weather prediction concerned with eddy diffusion of particulate pollutant plumes and their transport by the wind. When conducting D-T modeling, establishing the height of the planetary boundary layer (PBL) is crucial to defining the vertical bounds within which a plume can become thoroughly mixed. The PBL can be deduced from...
|
![Planetary boundary layer height determination during Pacific 2001 using the advantage of a scanning lidar instrument [An article from: Atmospheric Environment]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51C4M48N0CL._SL160_.jpg)
|
Planetary boundary layer height determination during Pacific 2001 using the advantage of a scanning lidar instrument [An article from: Atmospheric Environment]
by K.B. Strawbridge (Author), B.J. Snyder (Author)
This digital document is a journal article from Atmospheric Environment, published by Elsevier in 2004. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description: A novel method for determining the boundary layer height has been developed specifically for scanning lidar data. The Meteorological Service of Canada has recently developed a scanning lidar facility (RASCAL-Rapid Acquisition Scanning Aerosol Lidar) capable of fast azimuth and elevation scanning profiles of the lower troposphere. During the Pacific 2001 field campaign in the Lower Fraser Valley (LFV) of British Columbia, RASCAL measurements were conducted from the Langley Lochiel ground site (49.03^oN,...
|
|
|
Workshop on Planetary Boundary Layer 14-18 August 1978 Boulder Colorado
by J. C. Wyngaard (Author)
|
![Semi-analytical solution of the steady three-dimensional advection-diffusion equation in the planetary boundary layer [An article from: Atmospheric Environment]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51C4M48N0CL._SL160_.jpg)
|
Semi-analytical solution of the steady three-dimensional advection-diffusion equation in the planetary boundary layer [An article from: Atmospheric Environment]
by C.P. Costa (Author), M.T. Vilhena (Author), D.M. Moreira (Author), Tirabassi (Author)
This digital document is a journal article from Atmospheric Environment, published by Elsevier in 2006. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description: We present a three-dimensional solution of the steady-state advection-diffusion equation considering a vertically inhomogeneous planetary boundary layer (PBL). We reach this goal applying the generalized integral transform technique (GITT), a hybrid method that had solved a wide class of direct and inverse problems mainly in the area of heat transfer and fluid mechanics. The transformed problem is solved by the advection-diffusion multilayer model (ADMM) method, a semi-analytical solution based on a...
|
|