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Dr. Amber Jenkins

Amber Jenkins is Editor of NASA's Climate Change website and project manager of the Center for Climate Sciences at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. She's passionate about climate change, science and science communication.

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Climate change chronicles from NASA


Science fact, not fiction
Isaac Asimov on the greenhouse effect
January 6, 2011
posted by Dr. Amber Jenkins
16:00 PST

I stumbled upon this video earlier today. It’s Isaac Asimov, famous science fiction writer and biochemist, talking about global warming — back in January 1989. If you change the coloring of the video, the facial hair style, and switch out Asimov for someone else, the video could pretty much have been made today.

Asimov was giving the keynote address at the first annual meeting of The Humanist Institute. “They wanted me to pick out the most important scientific event of 1988. And I really thought that the most important scientific event of 1988 will only be recognized sometime in the future when you get a little perspective.”

What he was talking about was the greenhouse effect, which, he goes on to explain, is “the story everyone started talking about [in 1988], just because there was a hot summer and a drought.” (Sound familiar, letting individual weather events drive talk of whether the Earth’s long-term climate is heating up or cooling down??)

The greenhouse effect explains how certain heat-trapping (a.k.a. “greenhouse”) gases in our atmosphere keep our planet warm, by trapping infrared rays that Earth would otherwise reflect back out into space. The natural greenhouse effect makes Earth habitable — without our atmosphere acting like an electric blanket, the surface of the earth would be about 30 degrees Celsius cooler than it is now.

The problem comes in when humans tinker with this natural state of affairs. Our burning of fossil fuels (coal, oil and gas) constantly pumps out carbon dioxide — a heat-trapping gas — into the atmosphere. Our cutting down of forests reduces the number of trees there are to soak up some of this extra carbon dioxide. All in all, our atmosphere and planet heats up, (by about 0.6 degrees Celsius since the Industrial Revolution) with the electric blanket getting gradually thicker around us.

“I have been talking about the greenhouse effect for 20 years at least,” says Asimov in the video. “And there are other people who have talked about it before I did. I didn’t invent it.” As we’ve stressed here recently, global warming, and the idea that humans can change the climate, is not new.

As one blogger notes, Asimov’s words are as relevant today as they were in 1989. “It’s almost like nothing has happened in all this time.” Except that Isaac Asimov has come and gone, and the climate change he spoke of is continuing.

Asimov's full speech can be seen here.

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Pick of the pics
Meandering along
January 3, 2011
posted by Dr. Amber Jenkins
16:00 PST
Pick of the pics
Credit: The Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth, Astronaut photograph ISS022-E-19513. Caption adapted from the Gateway webpage

This photo, taken by the Expedition 22 crew onboard the International Space Station a year ago, shows the Rio Negro, one of the most meandering rivers in South America.

The river generally flows southeast from the Andes Mountains to the Atlantic Ocean. Its floodplain, which is about 10 kilometers wide, supports the biggest pear- and apple-growing region of Argentina. During the 1800s, the river was also the demarcation line between farmlands of European settlers and territory controlled by indigenous people.

The Rio Negro is a dramatic example of how mobile a river can be. Its floodplain is covered with curved relicts of channels known as “meander scars”. Meander scars show where the river used to snake and bend in the recent geological past, in this case probably during the last few hundred years.

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