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Mikira
Lv 5
Mikira asked in EnvironmentGlobal Warming · 1 decade ago

What is Earth's Global Climate?

We have different Climates even throughout the US.

http://weathereye.kgan.com/cadet/climate/climate.h...

This site shows we have seven distinct climates throughout the United States, and if you add in Hawaii and Alaska it would increase to nine.

So what is the overall Global Climate of the earth known to be during an Interglacial period?

Also what is the overall Global Climate of the earth known to be during a Glaciation period?

And have the Earth's Climate Varied during each of the different Glaciation and Interglacial periods?

(This isn't about CO2 levels, but CO2 levels and other Green House Gases would make a difference to each of the Interglacial periods and how long each Glaciation Period lasted.)

Update:

I love children, that's why I ask questions like this one to have people gain a higher understanding of what the discussion is all about.

Update 2:

Do I ask questions at times that are too hard to answer? If so I will try to find discussion topics that are easier or funner to answer.

Update 3:

Edit: Pentagrul did you accidentally block me? Since I can't open any of your questions anymore.

Update 4:

Edit: Enraged Parrot - I love that you find this to be an interesting question, especially since it appears to never have been asked before. I also promise to wait to see if you find any more information to add to your answer, before making a decision on who'll I'll give the best answer to.

6 Answers

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  • Tomcat
    Lv 5
    1 decade ago
    Favorite Answer

    On a global scale the climate consists of the atmosphere and the oceans attempting to balance the searing heat at the tropics with the frigid conditions at the poles. As I am sure you are aware the tilt on the earths axis complicates things by regulating the seasonal daylight amount received with a gradient modulated by latitude. This is even further complicated by the Southern Hemisphere being dominated by oceans and the northern hemisphere surface area being dominated by continents.

    To further complicate matters the Earth has an orbit which causes it to be roughly 3.5 million miles closer to the Sun during winter in the northern hemisphere. This causes the Earth to receive about 6.9% more solar energy during perihelion relative to aphelion. The dynamics of the continously varying solar radiation and axial tilt are far to complicated for the most sophisticated computer models to handle.

    So, the best answer I can give you is, Earth's climate is complicated, but I think we will eventually understand it, in another 100 years.

  • 1 decade ago

    Hahah, no, it isn't too hard to answer. It's actually an interesting question. I can't find any reading material on the subject though, so my answer will have to come straight from my fantastical brain.

    I'm not sure that the idea of a global climate is meaningful. There are many different climate zones all across the world, from dry and cold to warm and moist. It's more helpful, I think, to look at each zone individually, or look at the ways the different climates interact. In the case of the current planetary warming, I'd want to look at how the warming planet is going to affect different regions of the globe; how it will affect precipitation patterns in arid desert regions, or how it will affect food production in the mid latitudes, for instance.

    If had to give a, "average global climate" for the planet as it currently is, I suppose I'd say it was warm and moist, with relatively turbulent atmosphere.

    That's all I've got for now. I'll think about it some more, and if anything comes to me I'll add it.

  • Rio
    Lv 6
    1 decade ago

    Last interglacial period (Carboniferous) is noted as being much like our present day environment.Glaciation periods had temps around 59F.The last part is a little tricky but what I understood there was a -5degree variance during a 100,000year spread.

    You got to stop this...

    Source(s): Same sites you've been to.
  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    All I need to say is in this article....

    Yahoonews 12/30/07 "2007 A year of weather records!"

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  • Ransom
    Lv 4
    1 decade ago

    Please don't muddy the argument with common sense and facts. You must hate all little children and the Earth.

  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    is is when the sun gets to close to the northpole and it starts to melt it it floods all of the northen part of amrica!! but scientis say that it might not happen untill 200,000,000,000,000,000 years! trust me you will be dead!

    Source(s): school!
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