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November 7, 2000
MEDIA CONTACT: Mario
Aguilera or Cindy Clark
858/534-3624
Scripps Scientist Awarded
Packard
Fellowship to Study Climate Change
New investigations may yield
clues important for future climate debates
Geochemist Jeffrey Severinghaus
of Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California,
San Diego, has been selected a 2000 Packard Fellow for investigations to
understand the stability of past and future climates.
Severinghaus, an associate
professor in the Geosciences Research Division at Scripps, specializes
in analyzing Earth’s climate by studying air trapped in ice cores.
Severinghaus’s most notable accomplishments involve unraveling the
mysteries of a series of abrupt climate changes that occurred just prior
to the dawn of civilization about 12,000 years ago. These included the
discovery of an abrupt 16-degree-Farenheit rise in fewer than 40 years.
With the $625,000 fellowship
($125,000 per year for five years) from the David and Lucile Packard
Foundation, Severinghaus will strive to decipher how methane, a
colorless, odorless gas, can yield clues about Earth’s climate.
"A number of people have
proposed that methane bound in sediments in the form of methane hydrate
(a solid form of methane much like ice) may be an important contributor
to the atmospheric methane budget," said Severinghaus. "The
speculation is that as the climate warms abruptly, it destabilizes these
methane hydrates, which then spontaneously turn into gas, and in a
catastrophic way this methane comes bubbling up to the surface all at
once."
The payoff of such research is
twofold. First, it may reveal if jumps in atmospheric methane are a
response to rapid climate change. Second, because methane is mostly
generated from tropical swamps, Severinghaus’s new research may
help indicate whether abrupt climate changes originate in the warm
tropics or, contrary to dominant views, in the cold high latitude
environments.
The earth’s climate has been
remarkably stable over the last 10,000 years, the era in which human
agriculture and civilization have evolved, in contrast to the prevailing
patterns before it.
"Verifying and
understanding abrupt climate changes has intrinsic intellectual value as
well as practical urgency in light of humanity’s ongoing addition of
greenhouse gases to the atmosphere and the remote possibility that we
might trigger such a change," said Severinghaus.
With the Packard Fellowship,
Severinghaus plans to develop new technology for extracting air samples
in Greenland. A novel instrument will melt out large cavities of ancient
ice, and in the process extract the hundreds of gallons of ancient air
required to conduct methane studies.
Severinghaus hopes that
deciphering the mechanisms of past climate instability will help inform
the debate over future climates.
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Scripps Institution of
Oceanography, at the University of California, San Diego, is one of the
oldest, largest, and most important centers for global science research
and graduate training in the world. The National Research Council has
ranked Scripps first in faculty quality among oceanography programs
nationwide. The scientific scope of the institution has grown since its
founding in 1903 to include biological, physical, chemical, geological,
geophysical, and atmospheric studies of the earth as a system. More than
300 research programs are under way today in a wide range of scientific
areas. The institution has a staff of about 1,300, and annual
expenditures of approximately $100 million, from federal, state, and
private sources. Scripps operates the largest U.S. academic fleet with
four oceanographic research ships and one research platform for
worldwide exploration.
Scripps Institution of
Oceanography on the World Wide Web: scripps.ucsd.edu
Scripps
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