Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Nonequilibrium and Equilibrium in Populations and Metapopulations
- Part II Nonequilibrium and Equilibrium in Communities
- Part III Equilibrium and Nonequilibrium on Geographical Scales
- Part IV Latitudinal Gradients
- Part V Effects Due to Invading Species, Habitat Loss and Climate Change
- 13 The physics of climate: equilibrium, disequilibrium and chaos
- 14 Episodic processes, invasion and faunal mosaics in evolutionary and ecological time
- 15 The emerging infectious diseases crisis and pathogen pollution
- 16 Establishment or vanishing: fate of an invasive species based on mathematical models
- 17 Anthropogenic footprints on biodiversity
- 18 Worldwide decline and extinction of amphibians
- 19 Climatic change and reptiles
- 20 Equilibrium and nonequilibrium in Australian bird communities – the impact of natural and anthropogenic effects
- 21 Population dynamics of insects: impacts of a changing climate
- 22 The futures of coral reefs
- Part VI Autecological Studies
- Part VII An Overall View
- Index
- References
13 - The physics of climate: equilibrium, disequilibrium and chaos
from Part V - Effects Due to Invading Species, Habitat Loss and Climate Change
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Nonequilibrium and Equilibrium in Populations and Metapopulations
- Part II Nonequilibrium and Equilibrium in Communities
- Part III Equilibrium and Nonequilibrium on Geographical Scales
- Part IV Latitudinal Gradients
- Part V Effects Due to Invading Species, Habitat Loss and Climate Change
- 13 The physics of climate: equilibrium, disequilibrium and chaos
- 14 Episodic processes, invasion and faunal mosaics in evolutionary and ecological time
- 15 The emerging infectious diseases crisis and pathogen pollution
- 16 Establishment or vanishing: fate of an invasive species based on mathematical models
- 17 Anthropogenic footprints on biodiversity
- 18 Worldwide decline and extinction of amphibians
- 19 Climatic change and reptiles
- 20 Equilibrium and nonequilibrium in Australian bird communities – the impact of natural and anthropogenic effects
- 21 Population dynamics of insects: impacts of a changing climate
- 22 The futures of coral reefs
- Part VI Autecological Studies
- Part VII An Overall View
- Index
- References
Summary
Although our knowledge of the Earth’s climate becomes less and less detailed the further back we try to probe, two facts are clear. Firstly, the climate has changed on a wide range of timescales, in response to natural process we only partially understand. And secondly, despite this, the Earth’s globally averaged surface temperature has remained within a relatively narrow range for most of its history. Over the past 10 000, as human civilization has arisen, this has been no more than 1°C. On geological timescales the range is perhaps 10 to 20°C, or roughly 5% of the mean when measured on the Kelvin (absolute) temperature scale.
Thus the definition of equilibrium is not straightforward. Nevertheless, it will make sense to firstly examine the Earth’s climate in an equilibrium state before we more closely examine its current disequilibrium. Changes on longer timescales will be briefly discussed in the final section of this chapter.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Balance of Nature and Human Impact , pp. 183 - 198Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013