Fr. 290.00

Evolution of Earth''s Climate

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 1 to 3 weeks (not available at short notice)

Description

Read more

Climate change is one of the most controversial and argued issues in the world today, and it has been for years. It has been politicized by politicians on all sides, some scientists have used the study of it for their own material gain above true scientific discovery, and some scientific theories surrounding it have been believed even though proven false. But there is not, by any means, complete agreement among all scientists throughout the world on this issue.
 
Written by two of the world's most well-respected environmental and petroleum engineers, this book is meant to be one voice in the scientific literature on this important subject. Other books, also available from Wiley-Scrivener, take the opposite stance, but it is important, in our scientific journey, to listen to all voices and rely on facts, rather than opinions. We trust the reader to make his or her decisions based on all of the facts, and not just some of them.

List of contents

Introduction XV
 
Acknowledgments XIX
 
Part I: Climatic Paradox 1
 
1 Climatic Paradox 3
 
Historic Temperatures of Early Earth 3
 
Concepts by Some of Global Warming 5
 
Earth's Historic Temperature Charts 6
 
Misuse of Temperature Charts 7
 
Use of Paleoclimatology to Estimate Prehistoric Temperatures 8
 
Use of the Oxygen Isotope Ratio to Estimate Historic Temperatures 9
 
Historic Temperature Charts for the Past 4.6 BY 10
 
Glacial Periods and Interglacial Periods (4.5 to 0.540 BY AGO) 10
 
Historic Temperature Record of the Past 540 MY 11
 
Today's Temperature Charts 16
 
The Sun--a Primary Source of Energy 17
 
Physical Aspects of the Sun 18
 
Sunspots 18
 
Solar Irradiation Reaching the Earth 20
 
The Sun's Energy 23
 
Energy Received by the Earth from the Sun 26
 
The Paradox Reviewed 27
 
2 Adiabatic Theory 29
 
Troposphere 29
 
How is Heat Transferred in the Troposphere? 31
 
Modeling the Earth's Troposphere 33
 
Features of the Earth's Atmosphere 33
 
Development of an Adiabatic Equation 35
 
Development of the Adiabatic Equation 37
 
Earth's Troposphere Model 41
 
Effect of Precession Angle 42
 
Application of Adiabatic Equation to the Planet Venus 47
 
3 The Earth's Synoptic Activities 51
 
Greenhouse Effect Adiabatic Theory 51
 
Model of Heat Transfer in the Troposphere 52
 
Part II: Development of the Hydrosphere 59
 
4 Development of Earth's Hydrosphere 61
 
Hydrosphere of the Primordial Earth 61
 
Formation of the Hydrosphere 66
 
Part III: Development of the Earth's Atmosphere 79
 
5 Earth's Historic Atmospheres 81
 
Earth's Primordial Atmosphere 81
 
Earth's First Atmosphere (Hadean time--4.56 to 4.0 BY ago) 83
 
Earth's Second Atmosphere (Archean time, 4.0 to 2.5 BY ago) 85
 
Earth's Third Atmosphere (Proterozoic to mid-Phanerozoic time - 2.5 to 0.54 BY ago) 86
 
Today's Atmosphere (Phanerozoic time, 0.542 BY ago to today) 89
 
The Earth's Future Atmosphere 89
 
6 Nitrogen in Earth's Atmosphere 91
 
Origin of Earth's Atmospheric Nitrogen 91
 
Estimate of the Earth's Volume of Organic-Nitrogen Sediments 95
 
7 Development of Free Oxygen in Earth's Atmosphere 99
 
Oxygen 99
 
History of Free Oxygen in Earth's Atmosphere 100
 
8 Development of Methane in Earth's Atmosphere 111
 
Methane the Gas 111
 
Historic Levels of Methane in the Earth's Atmosphere 114
 
Monitoring of Methane Gas Emissions 126
 
9 The Effect of the Greenhouse Gases 129
 
The Greenhouse Gases 129
 
The Classic Greenhouse Effect 130
 
The Greenhouse Gases 131
 
Understanding the Greenhouse Effect 134
 
The Greenhouse Effect 135
 
Effect of the Precession Angle 138
 
Convective Heat Transsphere in Troposphere 140
 
Effect of Water Vapor on Heat Transfer 140
 
Effect of Carbon Dioxide on Temperature Distribution 141
 
The Effect of Carbon Dioxide Anthropogenic Emissions 143
 
10 Development of Carbon Dioxide in Earth's Atmosphere 147
 
Carbon Dioxide 147
 
Sources of Carbon Dioxide 148
 
The Carbon Cycle 148
 
Mass of Carbon in the Earth's Crust 151
 
Mass of Carbon in the Earth's Mantle 151
 
Historic Content of Carbon Dioxide in the Earth's Atmosphere 155
 
Earth's Hadean Atmosphere (4.56 to 4.0 BY ago) 155
 
Earth's Archaean Atmos

About the author










John O. Robertson, PhD, is the owner of Earth Engineering, Inc. and an adjunct professor at ITT Tech in National City, CA.  He has over 50 years of experience in petroleum and environmental engineering and geology and is the author of over 12 textbooks and 75 articles.
George V. Chilingar, PhD, is an Emeritus Professor of Engineering at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, CA. He is one of the most well-known petroleum geologists in the world and the founder of several prestigious journals in the oil and gas industry. He has published over 70 books and 500 articles and has received over 100 awards over his career.
Oleg G. Sorokhtin is recognized for his work in geophysics, geology and ecology at the institute of Oceanology of the Russian Academy of Sciences.  He passed away in 2010.
Nikolai Sorokhtin is a geologist and academician of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences and has participated in over 20 major geological expeditions and author of more than 100 scientific publications, including six monographs.
Wennan Long is a reservoir engineer specialist in Synergy Oil and Gas, LLC in Long Beach, California and an active member of the Russian Academy of Nature Sciences   He has published many engineering articles in the areas of climate change and environmental science.


Summary

Climate change is one of the most controversial and argued issues in the world today, and it has been for years. It has been politicized by politicians on all sides, some scientists have used the study of it for their own material gain above true scientific discovery, and some scientific theories surrounding it have been believed even though proven false. But there is not, by any means, complete agreement among all scientists throughout the world on this issue.

Written by two of the world's most well-respected environmental and petroleum engineers, this book is meant to be one voice in the scientific literature on this important subject. Other books, also available from Wiley-Scrivener, take the opposite stance, but it is important, in our scientific journey, to listen to all voices and rely on facts, rather than opinions. We trust the reader to make his or her decisions based on all of the facts, and not just some of them.

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.