First International Conference on

Global Warming and

the Next Ice Age

 

 

 

August 19 – 24, 2001

Dalhousie University

Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences Building

University and Le Marchant

Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

 

 

 

Petr Chylek

Chair

Scientific Program Committee

chylek@fizz.phys.dal.ca

Glen Lesins

Chair

Organizing Committee

lesins@fizz.phys.dal.ca

 

 

Program and

Registration Information

www.atm.dal.ca

 

SUNDAY, AUGUST 19, 2001

5:00-7:00 REGISTRATION, Cheese, Crackers and Wine

MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 2001

8:30-9:00 REGISTRATION

9:00

P. Chylek

Welcome to the Global Warming and the Next Ice Age

M-1: Ice Cores Climate Record

Chair: Sunling Gong, Meteorological Service of Canada

9:30

M1.1

p.20

J. W. C. White, J.-R. Petit

Paleoclimate from Ice Cores: Abrupt Climate Change and the Prolonged Holocene

10:00

M1.2

p.24

L. G. Thompson, E. Mosley-Thompson, M. E. Davis, K. A. Henderson, P.-N. Lin, H. H. Brecher

Climate Surprises: Lessons from Tropical Glaciers

10:30

   

Coffee

 

M-2: Carbon Dioxide and Water Vapor

Chair: Harold Ritchie, Dalhousie University and Meteorological Service of Canada

10:45

M2.1

p.28

J. Veizer

Four Billion Years of Carbon Cycle: What’s the Message for Us?

11:15

M2.2

p.29

W. M. Gray

Natural Versus Anthropogenic Climate Change

11:45

   

Panel Discussion

White, Thompson, Veizer, Gray

12:15

   

Lunch

 

M-3: Recent Climate Change

Chair: Keith Thompson, Dalhousie University

1:30

M3.1

p.34

J. R. Christy

Layer-Mean Global Temperature from Satellites

2:00

M3.2

p.38

T. R. Karl

(Russell Vose)

Uncertainty and Observed Climate Change Variability: Means and Extremes

2:30

M3.3

p.39

H. Beltrami

Global Ground Surface Temperature and Heat Flux Histories from Geothermal Measurements: Inferences from Inversion of the Global Dataset

3:00

M3.4

p.43

S. F. Singer

Is the Climate Warming?

3:30

4:00

 

 

Panel Discussion

Coffee

Christy, Karl, Beltrami, Singer

M-4: Paleoclimate

Chair: John DeLuisi. NOAA, Boulder

4:15

M4.1

p.44

G. S. Jenkins

The Use of Global Climate Models to Unravel the Mystery of Low Latitude Glaciation

4:45

M4.2

p.45

D. M. Anderson, C. M. Eakin, C. Woodhouse

Paleoclimate Data Available from the World Data Center for Paleoclimatology

5:15

M4.3

p.47

P. Chylek, G. Lesins, U. Lohmann

Enhancement of Dust Source Area During Ice Ages Due to Changes of the Hadley Circulation

5:27

M4.4

p.51

A. Hall, R. Stouffer

An Extreme Climate Event in a Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere Model without External Forcing

5:40

   

End

 

7:30 Bus to IMAX Theater

8:00-8:15 Introduction by Paal Brekke

8:15 SOLARMAX 40 min documentary movie

9:10 Bus to Dalhousie

TUESDAY, AUGUST 21, 2001

Late Registration: 8:10-8:25

8:30 - 8:55: Jubilee String Quartet (violin I - Gina Burgess, violin II - Diana Cohen, viola - Megan Bain, cello - Rachel Matthews)

The Jubilee Quartet is a classical string quartet, based in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Featuring some of the finest young musicians Nova Scotia has to offer, the members are all alumni of, or participating in programs offered by the Dalhousie University Music Department and the Nova Scotia Youth Orchestra. To learn more about The Jubilee Quartet and its musicians, visit their web site: http://www.jubileeq.ns.ca.

Pachelbel: Canon in D

Smetana: From the Moldau

Borodin: Nocturno from Quartet No. 2

Vivaldi: Summer - movement III

Barber: Adagio for Strings

 

T-1: Climate Variability 1

Chair: Richard Greatbatch, Dalhousie Univerrsity

9:00

T1.1

p.55

J. W. Hurrell

Tropical Origins for Recent North Atlantic Climate Change

9:30

T1.2

p.56

Z. Gedalof, N. J. Mantua, D. L. Peterson, D. J. Smith

Proxy perspectives on North Pacific climate variability

9:50

T1.3

p.62

T. Landscheidt

Solar Forcing of the ENSO, NAO, and PDO

10:15

   

Coffee

 

 

T-2: Climate Variability 2

Chair: Chris de Freitas, University of Auckland, New Zeland

10:30

T2.1

p.95

A. Clarke

The Variability of the North Atlantic Thermohaline Circulation

11:00

T2.2

p.67

M. S. Serreze

Recent Changes in the North High-Latitude Environment: A Review of the Instrumental Record

11:30

T2.3

p.73

A. M. Greene, W. S. Broecker

Some observations on the interpretation of recent glacier fluctuations

11:50

12:20

   

Panel Discussion

Lunch

Hurrell, Gedaloff, Landscheidt, Clarke, Serreze, Greene

 

T-3: Climate Change in Polar Regions

Chair: Hartmut Grassl, Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg

1:40

T3.1

p.81

H. B. Granberg

Antarctic Snow and Global Climate

1:52

T3.2

p.71

R. Heino

Changes in Climate Extremes in Northern Europe

2:04

T3.3

p.77

P. Chylek

G. Lesins

Recent Temperature Trends in Greenland

2:16

2:28

T3.4

p.85

G. Holloway, T. Sou

Coffee

The Arctic is Melting: (1) a lot, (2) a little, (3) not at all, (4) can’t tell, (5) none of the above.

 

 

 

 

 

T-4: Climate Variability 3

Chair: John Christy, University of Alabama, Huntsville

2:40

T4.1

p.91

R. J. Haarsma, F. M. Selton, H. Goose

Mechanisms of extra-tropical decadal variability

3:00

T4.2

p.96

L. D. Keigwin, J. Sachs, Y. Rosenthal

A 1600-year History of the Labrador Current off Nova Scotia

3:20

T4.3

p.97

A. J. Brocolli, C. D. Hewitt, J. F. B. Mitchell, R. J. Stouffer

Ice-Age Tropical Climate Sensitivity: The Relative Importance of Atmospheric and Oceanic Processes

3:35

T4.4

p.98

R. Jacob, C. Poulen, I. Foster, C. Schafer, M. Tobis, J. Anderson

Applications of a Fast Ocean Atmosphere Model

3:50

T4.5

p.227

N. Zeng

An Earth System Model for Climate Variability Studies

4:05

T4.6

 

D.H. Douglas, B.D. Clader

Determination of the Parameters of the Earth-Climate System due to Forcing from the Solar 11-year Cycle and from Mt. Pinatubo Volcano Event

4:20

   

Break

 

 

T-5: Climate Variability 4

Chair: Raino Heino, Finish Meteorological Institute

4:35

T5.1

p.102

N. Calco, R. García, L. Gimeno, E. Hernández, D. Gellego, P. Ribera

Characterization of ENSO Impact on Tropospheric MSU Temperature

4:47

T5.2

p.107

K. Higuchi, A. Shabbar, C. W. Yuen

On a Relationship between the NAO and the Oceanic Heat Flux

4:59

T5.3

p.111

L. Vincent, É. Mekis

Indicators of climate change in Canada

5:11

T5.4

p.115

K. M. Sutherland, G. S. Lines

Regional temperature trends in Atlantic Canada

5:23

T5.5

p.119

P. Domonkos

Decreasing precipitation in south-central Europe: results and doubts

5:35

T5.6

p.123

P. L. S. Rao

The Features of Asian Summer Monsoon during Extreme Rainfall over India

5:47

T5.7

p.127

S. A. Masoodian

An Analysis of Tempo-Spatial Variation of Daily Precipitation in Karun Basin and its Effects on Hydrologic Behavior of the Basin

5:59

T5.8

p.129

S. Singh, V. U. M. Rao, D. Singh

Climate Variability and its Relation with Telecommunications on Regional Scale in India

6:11

   

End

 

 

 

T-6: Poster Introduction

Chair: Ian Folkins, Dalhousie University

6:15 2 minutes per poster

 

T-7: Posters 6:40-7:40

 

P1

p.130

J. A. Augustine, J. L. DeLuisi

NOAA’s Surface radiation budget monitoring in the United States for climate research

 

P2

p.134

F. S. Medioli, C. T. Schafer

Global Warming and Alternate Agendas: Where we are and where we might be

 

P3

p.135

L. de la Torre, L. Gimeno, P. Ribera, R. García, E. Hernández, D. Gallego

The use of Atmospheric Relative Angular Momentum to diagnose the Arctic Oscillation

 

P4

p.139

C. Junker, P. O’Brien, S. G. Jennings, B. D. Hinds, E. Martinex-Andazola, A. D. A. Hansen, C. White, D. M. Garvey, R. G. Pinnick

Aerosol in the Arid Southwestern United States: Measurement of Mass Conservation, Absorption Characteristics, Black Carbon Content and their Dependence on Air Mass Origin and Meteorological Conditions

 

P5

p.140

K. A. Heans

Assessment of Pre-Industrial Carbon Dioxide Content in the Atmosphere using Hydro-Chemical Data

 

P6

p.145

T. K. Mefford

Meteorological Measurements at the NOAA/CMDL Baseline Observatory at Barrow, Alaska

 

P7

p.149

M. Sawada, A. E. Viau, K. Gajewski

Critical thresholds of dissimilarity in the modern analog technique (MAT) for quantitative paleoclimate reconstruction

 

P8

 

C. Perry

Magnitudes, Patterns, and Causes of 20th Century Floods in the United States

 

P9

 

B. J. Topliss

A Simple Filtering Method to Exploit Non-Stationary in the Ocean-Atmosphere Climate System

 

 

 

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 2001

Late Registration: 8:10-8:25

8:30-8:55: A Melodious Morning with Denise (cello) and Phillipe Djokic (violin)

Ravel: Duo for Violin and Cello

Piatti: Caprice for solo Cello

Handel/Halvorsen: Passacaglia for Violin and Cello

Young Canadian cellist, Denise Djokic, is quickly emerging as one of the brightest musical stars in Canada. She has been a prize winner of many national and international competitions. She has appeared as a guest soloist with several symphony orchestras including the Symphony Nova Scotia and the National Arts Centre Orchestra.

Denise has recently won a national competition for the use (for two years) of a Stradivari cello worth approximately $ 4 million US.

Her early studies were with Olive Shaw at the Maritime Conservatory for

Performing Arts, and Shimon Walt (Symphony Nova Scotia), and Richard Aaron

at the Cleveland Institute of Music (where she was in the Young Artist

Programme for High School students).

Next month, Denise is returning to Boston (after taking this past year off for Concertizing) to study with Laurence Lesser and Paul Katz at the New England Conservatory.

Philippe Djokic, Denise's father, is well known as one of Canada’s distinguished violinists, chamber musicians and teachers.

A native of France, he was raised in New Jersey where he began his early musical instruction. He received the prestigious Fritz Kreisler award upon graduating from the Juilliard School, and subsequently won prizes at major international competitions such as the Sibelius, Thibaoud and Paganini Competitions. He has appeared as soloist with major symphony orchestras in Paris, Zagreb, Detroit and Montreal. In 1979 he received First Prize in the C.B.C. Young Artist Competition. A frequent guest soloist with Symphony Nova Scotia, he also served as a concertmaster for several years during the late Georg Tintner’s tenure as conductor.

Djokic has been on the faculty of Dalhousie University’s Music Department since 1975 where he performs frequently in duo with his wife, pianist Lynn Stodola (Chair, Dalhousie Department of Music). As a chamber music performer, he is a frequent guest at many of the most important music festivals throughout North America and abroad. He has performed at the Munich International Music Festival and the Amsterdam Chamber Music Society. During the summers, he has participated in festivals in Oregon, Colorado, Alaska, Ottawa, Utah and Fredericton.

When he is not performing, Djokic devotes much of his time training young talented violinists. His former students are presently members of the Montreal Symphony, Symphony Nova Scotia and orchestras is Europe. One of Canada’s foremost young violinists, Jasper Wood (soloist with Symphony Nova Scotia last season) studied with Djokic from the age of seven.

Philippe Djokic has a son, Marc and a daughter, Denise, both of whom have distinguished themselves as young award-winning musicians (violin and cello

 

W-1: Anthropogenic Influence on Climate 1

Chair: Glen Lesins, Dalhousie University

9:00

W1.1

p.172

C. de Freitas

Is it reasonable for climate scientists to continue to claim that the observed changes in concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere are dangerous?

9:30

W1.2

p.161

H. Grassl, O. Kruger

Changed Cloud Characteristics due to Reduced Emissions in Europe

10:00

W1.3

p.162

P.J. Michaels, P. C. Knappenberger, R. E. Davis

Integrated projections of future warming based upon observed climate during the period of greenhouse enhancement

10:30

Coffee

 

W-2: Anthropogenic Influence on Climate 2

Chair: Lloyd Keigwin, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

10:45

W2.1

p.168

E. C. Weatherhead

Detecting Climate Change

11:10

W2.2

p.216

W. F. J. Evans, E. Puckrin

Comparison of Solar Variability Effects with Surface Radiative Forcing

11:30

Panel Discussion

deFreatas, Grassl, Michaels, Weatherhead, Evans

12:00

   

Questions and Answers from News Reporters

All Invited Speakers invited to participate

12:20

   

Lunch

 

 

W-3: Climate Variability 5

Chair: George Kukla, Lamont Doherty Observatory of Columbia University

1:40

W3.1

p.173

V. C. Slonosky

Climate and the NAO during the Little Ice Age: Instrumental Records from Europe and North America

1:52

W3.2

p.177

M. Wang, J. Overland, N. Bond

Temperature Decadal Change over the Arctic as Seen from TOVS and NCEP Analysis

2:04

W3.3

p.178

P. J. Wetzel

Icehouse effect: A Selective Arctic Cooling Trend Current Models are Missing

2:16

W3.4

p.182

A. S. Gagnon, W. A. Gough

Intermodel comparison of the Hudson Bay region, Canada

2:28

   

Coffee

 

 

W-4: Solar Variability and Climate

Chair: Anthony Broccoli, NOAA, GFDL, Princeton

2:45

W4.1

p.187

P. E. Damon, A. N. Peristykh

Climate Implications of the Atmospheric ) 14C Spectrum

2:57

W4.2

p.191

M. R. Morgan

A Hypothetical Model of Natural Climate Change Based on Solar Variability

3:09

W4.3

p.193

A. Clement, A. Hall, A. J. Brocolli, C. S. Jackson

Orbital signature in the climate. Part I: The Importance of precessional cycle in the tropics

3:21

W4.4

p.197

A. Hall, A. Clement, A. J. Brocolli, C. Jackson

Orbital Signature in the Climate. Part II: Mid- and High-Latitude Climate Modes

3:35

Break

 

 

W-5: Atmospheric Aerosols and Social Impact

Chair: Roger Shaw, Dalhousie University

3:50

W5.1

p.1

S. G. Jennings

The Marine Atmospheric Aerosol and Some Radiative Implications

4:20

W5.2

p.5

U. Lohmann

The magnitude of different aerosol-cloud effects between pre-industrial and present day

4:32

W5.3

p.9

S. Cosineau, J.- P. Blanchet, U. Lohmann

Albedo variations resulting from indirect effects of natural and anthropogenic sulfate aerosols in NARCM

4:44

W5.4

p.13

B. G. Liepert

Multi-Decadal Surface Solar Radiation Observations and their Relevance to Cloud and Aerosol Changes

4:56

W5.5

p.203

A. S. Keklikian

Sustainable Planning and Growth in Canada’a Capital Region

5:08

W5.6

p.207

R. Kuzelka, S. Seacrest, R. Leonard

Climate Change: Who is Listening; Who is Planning?

5:20

W5.7

p.211

J. M. Kasimolo

Climate Change: El-Nino in Kenya

5:32

W5.8

p.215

C. M. Jambo

Effects of Climate Changes on Lake Chilwa Fisheries (Malawi): An Overview of Fisheries Management Perspective

5:45

   

End

 

 

 

6:30-10:00 Banquet at the Lord Nelson Hotel

 

 

 

 

 

THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2001

8:10-8:25 Late Registration

8:30-8:55: Musical Prelude with Flute and Guitar

TH-1: Solar Variability and the Next Ice Age 1

Chair: Jim White, Colorado University, Boulder

9:00

TH1.1

p.241

P. Brekke

The Sun’s role in Climate Changes

9:30

TH1.2

p.245

A. Berger, M.-F. Loutre

An exceptionally long interglacial ahead ?

10:00

TH1.3

p.249

C. A. Perry

A Solar Kick for Climate: The Short and Long of It

10:30

   

Coffee

 

TH-2: Solar Variability and the Next Ice Age 2

Chair: Greg Holloway, Institute of Ocean Sciences, Sidney, BC

10:45

TH2.1

p.257

G. Kukla

Did the Last Interglacial End with Global Warming?

11:15

TH2.2

p.256

W. R. Peltier, G. Vettoretti

Glacial Inception in the Greenhouse: Coupled A-O GCM Simulations of the 5e-5d Transition and the Next

11:45

   

Panel Discussion

Brekke, Berger, Perry, Kukla, Peltier

12:15

   

Lunch

 

TH-3: Climate Variability 6

Chair: John Augustine, NOAA, Boulder

1:40

TH3.1

p.250

M. Khodri, Y. Leclainche, G. Ramstein, P. Braconnot, O. Marti, E. Cortijo

The role of the ocean in triggering the last glacial inception

2:00

TH3.2

p.220

O. Vidal, L. Gimeno, P. Ribera, R. García, E. Hernández, D. Gallego

Exploring the possibilities of the advection of temperature to diagnose the influence of changes in the atmospheric circulation on global temperature

2:12

TH3.3

 

Q. Fu, M. Baker,

D. Hartmann

Tropical Cirrus and Water Vapor

2:24

TH3.4

p.224

W. Perrie

The impact of climate change on marine storms

2:36

   

Coffee

 

 

TH-4: Climate Variability 7

Chair: George Isaac, Dalhousie University and Meteorological Service of Canada

2:50

TH3.5

p.227

N. Zeng

An Earth System Model for Climate Variability Studies

3:02

TH3.4

p.228

A. Shabbar, K. Higuchi

Inter-ENSO Variability in Response to Boundary and Initial Flow Effects in our Ensemble of GCM Simulations

3:14

TH3.5

p.232

Y. Choi, K.-Y. Nam, H.-S. Jung, W.-T. Kwon

Estimating and Correcting Urban Bias in Regional Surface Temperature Time Series of Korea

3:26

TH3.6

p.236

D. Alessandro, P. Gabriella

Precipitation over Sardinia and associated large-scale circulation – a new approach.

3:38

TH3.7

p.240

S. A. Mahmood, K. Javed, S. Bilal, M. Riaz, F. Waqar

Infrared Detection Based Monitoring of Global Warming Gases

3:50

   

Thanks, Summary, Discussion

 

 

7:30-9:30 Open Forum Panel Discussion, P. Chylek - moderator

H. Grassl, P. Brekke, W. Gray, G. Kukla, C. Perry, C. de Freitas, A. Berger

 

FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 2001

10:00-10:45 Planning Committee

11:00--5:00 Bus Tour to Peggy’s Cove