Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication to Hans Oeschger
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 The Antarctic Ozone Hole, a Human-Caused Chemical Instability in the Stratosphere: What Should We Learn from It?
- PART ONE THE ANTHROPOGENIC PROBLEM
- PART TWO THE HUMAN PERSPECTIVE
- PART THREE MODELING THE EARTH'S SYSTEM
- 7 Earth System Models and the Global Biogeochemical Cycles
- 8 The Role of CO2, Sea Level, and Vegetation During the Milankovitch-forced Glacial-Interglacial Cycles
- 9 Nonlinearities in the Earth System: The Ocean's Role
- 10 Simulations of the Climate of the Holocene: Perspectives Gained with Models of Different Complexity
- 11 Interactions of Climate Change and the Terrestrial Biosphere
- PART FOUR INFORMATION FROM THE PAST
- PART FIVE HOW TO MEET THE CHALLENGE
- Index
- Plate section
7 - Earth System Models and the Global Biogeochemical Cycles
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication to Hans Oeschger
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 The Antarctic Ozone Hole, a Human-Caused Chemical Instability in the Stratosphere: What Should We Learn from It?
- PART ONE THE ANTHROPOGENIC PROBLEM
- PART TWO THE HUMAN PERSPECTIVE
- PART THREE MODELING THE EARTH'S SYSTEM
- 7 Earth System Models and the Global Biogeochemical Cycles
- 8 The Role of CO2, Sea Level, and Vegetation During the Milankovitch-forced Glacial-Interglacial Cycles
- 9 Nonlinearities in the Earth System: The Ocean's Role
- 10 Simulations of the Climate of the Holocene: Perspectives Gained with Models of Different Complexity
- 11 Interactions of Climate Change and the Terrestrial Biosphere
- PART FOUR INFORMATION FROM THE PAST
- PART FIVE HOW TO MEET THE CHALLENGE
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
ABSTRACT
Earth System Models have become a holy grail of the earth sciences. Earth System Models are a class of simulation that model a significant number of interactions between the atmosphere, the oceans, the land, the cryosphere, and the biogeochemical cycles. Such models are an evolution of climate and physical ocean models developed for disciplinary purposes and of the land surface models that have developed from ecology and hydrology. Increasingly they also include some components of the carbon cycle, ecosystems, and atmospheric photochemistry. The development of a new class of models successfully capturing the behavior of a system is itself a demonstration of a certain level of scientific knowledge. However, the development of Earth System Models has been strongly forced by a series of important scientific questions. Of special interest are questions coupling forcing (atmospheric greenhouse gases) and response (climate and ocean circulation). The carbon cycle is the best understood of the major global biogeochemical cycles, and so I focus on issues linked to carbon; however, the next generation of challenges will grow and include the nitrogen, ozone, sulfur, and iron cycles. In this chapter, I discuss some emerging questions and identify some key research areas associated with these new areas of inquiry.
Scientific Challenges
Where Does the Carbon Go?
For the past decades, as research has focused on the carbon cycle, there has been keen interest in the sinks of anthropogenic CO2 and especially the so-called missing sink. This is an Earth System modeling problem for two reasons.
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- Geosphere-Biosphere Interactions and Climate , pp. 113 - 118Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001