What’s the weather? Do you catch yourself looking to the sky? Aristotle, a Greek philosopher, used the word meteor to describe “things in the air.” Temperature and precipitation are the two main climate factors, although elevation, latitude, prevailing wind direction, topography and ocean currents also affect climate. Weather forecasters, called meteorologists, work with elements in the air: rain, snow, ice, clouds and pollution, to study information from weather satellites, radar, computers, sensors and observers all over the world. The earth has a general climate system subdivided into areas for an understanding of developments in weather that effect the world as a whole. Using the Köppen Climate Classification System, there are five base climates and ten subgroup climates. Play Climate Zones Flashcard Matching to familiarize yourself with the zones and their different characteristics. Defining climate patterns tells what may come next or what the result of one action might be and what will have to happen to balance things out. Scientists now understand that weather in one region effects weather worldwide.
Watch the sky and dress for the weather!
Activity 1 – Be a Skywatcher!!!
Chart a week’s worth of weather. First, check the sky in the morning. Make a weather forecast. Predict if it will be sunny, partly sunny, partly cloudy, or cloudy. Predict the percentage chance of precipitation. Predict whether there will be a breeze, a wind, or a gale force! Next, check with the paper or online weather source and see if your forecast measured up to the meteorologist’s. Chart the high and low temperatures. Be a skywatcher!
The five base climates using the Köppen Climate Classification System:
- tropical / megathermal
- dry and semiarid
- temperate / mesothermal
- continental / microthermal
- polar
Activity 2 – Severe Weather
There is the kind of weather we enjoy and then there is severe weather. Severe weather is a localized condition such as a severe thunderstorm possibly with damaging wind and hail, dense fog, tornadoes, hurricanes, typhoons, extreme heat or winter blizzards. Flooding can also be considered a severe form of weather. Find out what kind of severe weather is common in your climate and learn ways to prepare for it. Think of your essential needs: air, water, food, shelter and perhaps mobility (what about evacuation routes?). Locate the best protective area in your house and pack some water bottles and food that is non-perishable. Make a journal entry about where you will go and what you will have prepared in the event of severe weather.
Think Ahead! Be Prepared! Be Safe!
Activity 3 – Climate and the Carbon Cycle
The Carbon Cycle is essential to life on earth. It filters through the geosphere, hydrosphere, our lithosphere and our atmosphere. It is involved in split second processes like photosynthesis in water and on land with plants and trees. It is involved in processes like making fossils that take millions of years! The carbon cycle is involved in our planet’s climate and weather. Carbon is in our DNA, in the soil in which we grow food, in the food we eat and in the air we breathe. Map the carbon cycle from the earth and water and air to people. Take a look at DrawDown: 100 Ways to Reverse Global Warming. Pick three ways you can help and map those on your carbon cycle diagram
Breathe and be warm!
Activity 4 – CLimate and Earth's Energy Balance
Activity 5 – How can you help prevent global warming?
Is global warming real? Are humans really impacting the atmosphere? Check out NOAA’s Paleo Perspective on Global Warming. Take a look into Paleoclimatology. Use a carbon footprint calculator. Make a list of ways that you can live to use less energy, consume fewer products, and help to prevent global warming.
Review
- The climate affects people by:
- Climate is weather conditions over a period of time.
- Temperature and precipitation are two main climatic features.
- Weather watchers only need to look at the sky to predict the weather.
- Which two things have the greatest effect on Earth’s climate?
Explore
- 2 Degrees Celsius U.S. Climate Change Map
- AAAS Guide on Communicating Global Climate ChangePDF
- ACE National Strategic Planning Framework for the United States
- ARCHITECTURE 2030
- BIG HOT TO COLD : AN ARCHITECTURAL ODYSSEY
- Buildings as Weather
- Carbon Footprint Map
- CLEANnet.org
- Climate Action is Gardens
- Climate and Earth's Energy Balance
- Climate Change Curriculum: Earth Day
- CLimate Change Interactive
- Climate Change Simulations
- Climate Consultant
- Climate Cost Project
- Climate Feed Back Loops
- CLimate Innovation Tracker
- Climate Interactive.org
- Climate Science from Climate Scientists
- Climate Zones Flashcards Quizlet
- DrawDown Climate Change Solutions
- ESSEA Carbon Monoxide + Climate Change
- Geologic Timeline pdf
- Geostationary Satellite
- Global Earth Challenge 2020
- Green Peace
- How is Climate Change Affects Your Region Map
- How the World Tweets Climate Change
- Human Response to Climate Change
- Inconvenient Truth
- K4 Air + Climate
- MIT Climate Interactive Simmulations
- NASA Climate & Weather
- NASA Earth's Energy Budget
- NASA Global Climate Change
- National Severe Weather Warnings
- National Weather Satellite
- NOAA Paleoclimatology
- NSF Climate Change
- Our Climate Our Future Curriculum
- Paleoclimatology
- Paleo Perspective on Climate Change
- Phet Simulation Greenhouse Gas Emissions
- Reduce your Carbon Footprint w/ Carbon Calculator
- Sierra Club
- Spectrix: A GOES-R Imager Game: Color & Climate Data
- Storm Smarts Game
- TED Beauty & Fragility of Climate Change
- TEDed Lesson How Clouds Effect Earth's Temperature
- TED Photos of Melting Glaciers
- The Climate Reality Project
- UK RubbishbeGone Climate Change Strategies
- University of Chicago Climate Change Models
- US CLIMATE DATA BY STATE
- Video Climate Change
- Video Climates
- Video Dynamic Earth: Solar Energy Drives Climate
- Video Global Climate Change
- Video Sci Show Human Response to Climate Change
- Video Weather & Climate
- VOX Climate Change: Ice Thaw
- World Climate
- World Climate Data
- World Maps of Köppen-Geiger CLimate Classification
- World Wildlife Fund
- ZERZA LIMATE CHANGE RESPONSE FOR MANHATTEN