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HOST:
Center for Global Change Science



SERIES:
The Henry Kendall Memorial Lecture Series


More videos in this series


Vegetation Dynamics and the Earth System
Martin Claussen
April 7, 2005
4:00 PM

LOCATION:
26-100

SPONSOR INFO:
The Henry Kendall Memorial Lecture Series honors the memory of Professor Henry Kendall (1926-1999) who was the J.A. Stratton professor of physics at MIT. Kendall received the Nobel Prize in 1990 for research that provided the first experimental evidence for quarks. A founding member of the Union of Concerned Scientists in 1969, he served as its chair for 25 years. He was deeply involved with arms control and nuclear power safety issues. He played a leading role in organizing scientific community statements on global problems, including the World Scientists’ Warning to Humanity in 1992 and The Call for Action at the Kyoto Climate Summit in 1997.

EVENT SPONSORS:
Center for Global Change Science
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Earth System Initiative
Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences








   
Video Time Index
Vegetation Dynamics and the Earth System

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SPEAKER:
Martin Claussen
Professor of Climate Physics, Head of the Climate System Department,
Managing Director, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Potsdam University


ABOUT THE LECTURE:
Climate change does not unfold gradually or in a linear way. Peering back 11,000 years in our own Holocene era, Martin Claussen sketches a picture of abrupt and brutal shifts in the biosphere. His work involves modeling complex interactions among atmosphere, ocean, sea ice and vegetation. The Sahara Desert was once a green oasis, but dramatic disruptions in the last six thousand years led to its very rapid browning. Claussen’s models demonstrate that a slow evolution in the earth’s orbit and its tilt toward the sun triggered a reaction that led to swift loss of moisture and vegetation in North Africa. Claussen believes that interactions within Earth’s climate system -- specifically between vegetation cover and sea ice -- amplified the impact of the orbital shifts. “If the system gets a slight kick, it can jump from green to desert,” says Claussen. As a result of this change, humans may have been forced to migrate from the devastated Sahara region to the fertile Tigris, Euphrates and Nile River valleys, where new civilizations sprang up. Looking forward, Claussen notes that triggers such as an excess of human-generated carbon dioxide or deforestation might provoke similar dramatic climatic changes in global hotspots.

ABOUT THE SPEAKER:
Claussen received his Diploma in Meteorology from the University of Hamburg in 1981, was awarded his Ph.D. at the Max-Planck Institue for Meteorology in 1984, and received his Habilitation at the University of Hamburg in 1991. He was on the faculty at Free University of Berlin and has held research scientist appointments at Max-Planck Institute for Meteorology, GKSS Research Center in Geestacht, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Claussen has served as chair of the German Meteorological Society since 2003 and Secretary (Climate Modelling) of the European Geosciences Union since 2004. He is a member of the German National Committee on Global Change Research, the German Meteorological Society, the European Geosciences Union and the American Geophysical Union.

Claussen's Potsdam University site

NOTES ON THE VIDEO (Time Index):
Video length is 1:06:12.

Ronald G. Prinn, Director of the Center for Global Change Science, Co-Director of the Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change, and TEPCO Professor of Atmospheric Sciences, introduces Claussen.

At 3:43, Claussen begins.

At 47:50, Q&A begins.


 
The information on this page was accurate as of the day the video was added to MIT World. This video was added to MIT World on 2005-05-16.

       

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