. Earth Science News .
Europe To Continue To See Extreme Summer Conditions

Devastating floods struck parts of Europe in 2002 and 2005 (a cemetary in Romania in the the 2005 floods, pictured) while in 2003, the continent was gripped by a record heatwave that claimed as many as 35,000 lives.
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Sep 13, 2006
Continental Europe's extreme summers of recent years, characterised by heavy floods or killer heatwaves, could be commonplace by the turn of the century, a climate study says. Its authors believe that changes in the complex relationship between air temperature and land moisture, driven by global warming, will cause European summers to suffer from chronic variability by 2100.

Publishing on Thursday in the weekly British science journal Nature, the Swiss research team say that the hot, dry climate zone of the Mediterranean rim is destined to creep northwards as temperatures rise.

As a result, central and eastern Europe will suffer a "positive feedback mechanism" -- in essence, a vicious circle in which higher temperatures cause the soil to evaporate more and vegetation to breathe out more moisture.

In damp regions, more airborne moisture and warm air help to fuel the precipitation cycle, causing more and more rainfall and thus boosting the risk of flooding.

But in dry regions, moisture is swiftly driven out of soil and plants, leaving nothing to cool the atmosphere. As a result, the effects of a heatwave worsen.

Complicating this process is the likelihood that as the climate changes, the vegetation that it supports will change, too. For instance, in drier areas, forests may be replaced by scrubby, heat-loving plants, and this in turn will affect the moisture-atmosphere exchange.

Lead researcher Sonia Seneviratne, of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, told AFP that the work was based on a new computer model which predicted the effect of the land-moisture link on a map of Europe with nearly twice the resolution of previous models.

It focuses in particular on the mechanisms that led to more frequent heatwaves, but confirms there will be high variability from year to year, with extremely hot spells or very heavy rainfall, she said.

Devastating floods struck parts of Europe in 2002 and 2005 while in 2003, the continent was gripped by a record heatwave that claimed as many as 35,000 lives.

Previous research into climate change in Europe has also sketched the risk of huge variability from one year to the next, but the underlying causes for this were unclear.

Meanwhile, a separate study published in Nature said there was no evidence to suggest that changes in the Sun's brightness over the past millennium had had any significant effect on global warming.

Some scientists -- now a tiny minority, but backed by powerful lobby groups in the United States -- doubt that the rise in global temperatures since the start of the Industrial Revolution has been caused by greenhouse gases released by fossil fuels.

Instead, they have suggested changes in the amount of heat and light that Earth receives, either because of sunspots or because of tiny shifts in Earth's orbit.

Source: Agence France-Presse

Related Links
Weather News at TerraDaily.com
Beyond the Ice Age

Electric Ice Gives Earth A Buzz
Huntsville AL (SPX) Sep 14, 2006
Here's something fun to try in your kitchen: Go to the freezer, open the door and pry loose an ice cube. Next, look around the freezing compartment for some frost-the crystalline fuzz that loves to coat your frozen English peas. Found it? Rub the ice cube gently across the frost.







  • Ideas To Rebuild Hurricane-Devastated New Orleans Showcased At Italian Fair
  • The Role Of Academia In The Global Aid Industry
  • Keesler Hospital Takes Big Step Forward
  • Former US Environment Chief Blames New York For 9-11 Health Lapse

  • English Country Gardens Under Attack From Global Warming
  • Changes In Solar Brightness Too Weak To Explain Global Warming
  • Gore Calls On China And India To Tackle Climate Change
  • The Role Of Auto Industry And Consumer Behavior In Reducing Emissions

  • Smoke Plume Dispersal From The World Trade Center Disaster
  • Acoustic Data May Reveal Hidden Gas And Oil Supplies
  • DMC International Imaging Wins 2nd Year Contract To Monitor Amazonian Rainforest
  • What Is It Like To Be On A NASA Hurricane Mission

  • Tiny Fuel Cell Might Replace Batteries In Laptop Computers
  • Using Microbes To Fuel The US Hydrogen Economy
  • MIT Forges Greener Path To Iron Production
  • Air Force Prepares To Test Synthetic Fuel On B-52

  • Bird Outbreaks In Four Countries
  • University Launches New Website On 1918 Flu Pandemic
  • Clearing The Skies Could Stop An Epidemic
  • China Should Allow AIDS Patients And NGOs Proper Voice Says UN

  • Indonesia Gives Villagers Tips On Warding Off Wild Elephants
  • Risk Of Bluefin Tuna Disappearing From Mediterranean
  • NASA Study Solves Ocean Plant Mystery
  • Virus May Control Carp The Australian River Rabbit

  • Environmentalists Warn Against Moves To Open Andaman Islands
  • Ivory Coast Pollution Crisis Worsens Sharply
  • Oil Firm 'Concerned' Over Ivory Coast Poisoning
  • Arrests After China River Polluted By Arsenic Compound

  • You May Be Losing More Than Just Your Memory
  • Modern Humans, Not Neandertals, May Be Evolution's 'Odd Man Out'
  • Too Many Men Could Destabilize Society
  • How Did Our Ancestors' Minds Really Work

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement