Arctic Warming Effects on Permafrost

Permafrost in the coldest northern Arctic area — formerly thought to be almost unaffected by global warming because of its extreme environment — will thaw enough to become a permanent source of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere in this century.  There are people alive today that will see it.

The study was led by scientist Nicholas Parazoo of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena.  They used data on soil temperatures in Northern Alaska and Northern Siberia from the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, with a numerical model to calculate effects from the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado.  The model calculates changes in carbon emissions as plants grow and permafrost thaws in response to climate change. They assessed when the Arctic will transition to a carbon source instead of the carbon-neutral area it is today where some processes remove about as much carbon from the atmosphere as other processes emit.

Permafrost is soil that has remained frozen for years or centuries under topsoil. It contains organic material, such as leaves, that froze without decaying. When the permafrost temperature rises, decay begins, releasing Carbon Dioxide and Methane.  Both are greenhouse gases.

“Some of the very cold, stable permafrost in the highest latitudes in Alaska and Siberia appeared to be sheltered from extreme climate change, and we didn’t expect much impact over the next couple hundred years.” said Parazoo.  But the model surprised them.  It showed a speed-up of organic decay, at lower than expected temperatures, which caused earlier release greenhouse gases.  The peak transition will occur in 40 to 60 years.  The study calculated that as thawing continues, by the year 2300, total carbon emissions from this region will be 10 times as much as all human-produced fossil fuel emissions in 2016.

The bottom line is that global warming, as with global cooling that produced the ice ages, is a non-linear process.  Once it gets to a certain point, it takes on a life of its own regardless of what humans do.  Natural CO2 emissions from the extreme Arctic and the oceans (which are 70% of the world’s surface) will swamp human contributions in a self-sustaining cycle of warming that will continue until their sources are significantly depleted, at which time a new equilibrium will be established.

A Little History of the Environmental Protection Agency and Banned Chemicals

In today’s Education Report, I would like to talk about the protection of the environment, and two success stories.  With this report, I hope to show that the way government is working today is really about the same as it has always worked.

The year was 1970.   President Richard Nixon was greatly troubled by the degradation of quality of our environment.  It was part of his platform during run for the Presidency, and he followed through.  In his State of the Union message he delivered to Congress on Jan 22, 1970, he had this to say:

In the year 1980, will the President look back on a decade in which 70% of our people lived in metropolitan areas choked by traffic, suffocated by smog, poisoned by water, deafened by noise, and terrorized by crime? The great question of the 1970s is, shall we surrender to our surroundings, or shall we make our peace with nature and begin to make reparations for the damage we have done to our air, to our land, and to our water?

Restoring nature to its natural state is a cause beyond party and beyond factions. It has become a common cause of all the people of this country. It is a cause of particular concern to young Americans, because they more than we will reap the grim consequences of our failure to act on programs which are needed now if we are to prevent disaster later. Clean air, clean water, open spaces-these should once again be the birthright of every American. If we act now, they can be.

Six months later – on July 9, 1970 – he delivered a message to Congress to establish the Environmental Protection Agency.  It it, he said:

Our national government today is not structured to make a coordinated attack on the pollutants which debase the air we breathe, the water we drink, and the land that grows our food. Indeed, the present governmental structure for dealing with environmental pollution often defies effective and concerted action. Despite its complexity, for pollution control purposes the environment must be perceived as a single, interrelated system. Present assignments of departmental responsibilities reflect this interrelatedness.

A far more effective approach to pollution control would:

  • Identify pollutants.
  • Trace them through the entire ecological chain, observing and recording changes in form as they occur.
  • Determine the tot of man and his environment.
  • Examine interactions among forms of pollution.
  • Identify where in the ecological chain interdiction would be most appropriate.

One of the early actions of the EPA was to ban Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane, commonly known as DDT.  The EPA held seven months of hearings in 1971–1972, with scientists giving evidence for and against DDT. In the summer of 1972, the EPA announced the cancellation of most uses of DDT – exempting public health uses under some conditions. Immediately after the announcement, both Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), a private environmental group, and the DDT manufacturers, filed suit against EPA. Industry sought to overturn the ban, while EDF wanted a comprehensive ban. The cases were consolidated, and in 1973 the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled that the EPA had acted properly in banning DDT.

Some uses of DDT continued under the public health exemption. For example, in June 1979, the California Department of Health Services was permitted to use DDT to suppress flea vectors of bubonic plague

I include DDT here because, for all its benefits, it represented a clear and present danger not just to humans, but a wealth of friendly insects, and especially to birds.  It was a carcinogen, and it killed a lot of animals and insects.  DDT is a long-lived chemical, and one of its many effects is to cause the shells of birds eggs to thin out.  Out national bird, the Bald Eagle, was so badly affected by DDT that most of its eggs cracked and collapsed before the chicks matured.  Being an apex predator, Eagles were never populous.  But the combination of the chemical and loss of habitat left it an endangered species in the ‘60s.  Around 1900, there were about 11,000 pairs around the Chesapeake Bay.  In 1967 when they were declared endangered, there were fewer than 90 breeding pairs around the Chesapeake.

I remember hearing a EDF scientist talking about DDT in a radio interview.  He said it remained about 30 years in the environment before there was enough breakdown of the chemical for its effects to die out.  Sure enough, in the late ‘90s we started hearing about the comeback of Bald Eagles.  In 2007, were were more than 11,000 pairs nesting up and down the Chesapeake Bay, including several in the D.C. metropolitan area.  Banning DDT was not the only reason they recovered, but it was one big drivers.

I also want to mention the complete banning of Choroflourocarbons (CFCs) in the ‘90s.  One of the most well known was Freon.  Like DDT, CFCs have very long life (due to DDT’s low reactivity).  They have an average lifetime of as much as 100 years, depending on which variation you are discussing.  And they went everywhere.  Studies in the ‘50s and ‘60s found them in the arctic despite a lack of people there.  CFCs released into the environment drifted everywhere, including into the stratosphere where ultraviolet radiation breaks the chemical down into free radicals that combine chemically with Ozone.

Not good.  Ozone is the protective layer that attenuates ultraviolet radiation that is damaging to life on the ground. Stratospheric ozone protects life on the planet by absorbing potentially harmful ultraviolet radiation that can cause skin cancer and cataracts, suppress immune systems, and damage plant life.

Studies in the late 1970s  saw a steady decline of about four percent in the total amount of ozone in the ozone layer and a much larger springtime decrease in stratospheric ozone around Earth’s polar regions (the ozone hole).  In 1978 the United States banned the use of CFCs such as Freon in aerosol cans, the beginning of a long series of regulatory actions against their use.  By 1987, in response to a dramatic seasonal depletion of the ozone layer over Antarctica, diplomats forged the Montreal Protocol, which called for drastic reductions in the production of CFCs.  In 1989, 12 European Community nations agreed to ban the production of all CFCs by the end of the century. In 1990, diplomats met in London and voted to significantly strengthen the Montreal Protocol by calling for a complete elimination of CFCs by the year 2000. It was a long process, but production of new stocks ceased in most, if not all, countries in 1994.

Ozone levels stabilized by the mid-1990s and began to recover in the 2000s.  Recovery is projected to continue over the next century, and the ozone hole is expected to reach pre-1980 levels by around 2075.  We are just now beginning to see good effects.  This article came across my desk this month:

NASA Sees First Direct Proof of Ozone Hole Recovery

For the first time, scientists have shown through direct observations of the ozone hole by a satellite instrument, built by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, that levels of ozone-destroying chlorine are declining, resulting in less ozone depletion.

Measurements show that the decline in chlorine, resulting from an international ban on chlorine-containing human-produce chemicals called chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), has resulted in about 20 percent less ozone depletion during the Antarctic winter than there was in 2005.  The study was published Jan. 4 in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

Free Movie from BSFS Sat March 17

The Alien Factor
The Baltimore Science Fiction Society will screen The Alien Factor this Saturday on the 40th anniversary of its commercial release. This 1978 Baltimore Epic has been remastered to Blue-Ray for an enhanced viewing experience. Some of the original cast will be in attendance including Greg Dohler, the son of the producer/director (Greg also appeared in the film as one of the child actors).

WHEN: 7:00pm Saturday, March 17
WHERE: The Baltimore Science Fiction Society, 3310 Baltimore Street Baltimore, MD 21224

Price: FREE

Remembering Leonard – His Life, Legacy and Battle with COPD

Remembering Leonard – His Life, Legacy and Battle with COPD

“Remembering Leonard Nimoy,” the 1-hour PBS special, will air on WHUT (DC Area PBS station, Ch.19 on Comcast in Baltimore County) this coming Saturday 12/02 at  1200 noon.

It will air on MPT2 (Maryland Public Television, Ch.799 on Comcast in Baltimore County) on Friday 12/29 at 9pm.

PBS is airing a special film:“Remembering Leonard,” which looks at the life and legacy of Leonard and his battle with COPD.

➡️ For channel listings and air dates, visit the link below.
http://ow.ly/xctj50fk7UB

COPD PBS Broadcast: “Remembering Leonard” – AARC

During the month of November, PBS is airing “Remembering Leonard,” a film that looks at the life and legacy of Leonard Nimoy and his battle with COPD.

AARC.ORG

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine 25th Anniversary

‘Star Trek: Deep Space Nine’ Cast Preview Variety 25th Anniversary Photoshoot

January 2018 will mark the 25th anniversary of the premiere of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. Variety held a photo-shoot  to prepare for what will apparently be some special coverage of the anniversary and some of the cast and creatives who were on hand shared some preview photos.

Aron Eisenberg (Nog), Ira Steven Behr (EP), Marc Alaimo (Gul Dukat), Cirroc Lofton (Jake Sisko), Michael Dorn (Worf), Terry Farrell (Jadzia Dax), Nana Visitor (Kira Nerys), Armin Shimerman (Quark), Nicole de Boer (Ezri Dax), Jeffrey Combs (Weyoun, Brunt), Rick Berman (EP), Penny Johnson Jerald (Kasidy Yates), Rene Auberjonois (Odo), and Chase Masterson (Leeta) (Photo: Twitter/Rene Auberjonois/Variety)

Yoji Kondo Passing

It is with Sadness that we share the passing of a dear friend and integral part of ShoreLeave and Farpoint’s science programming, Mr. Yoji Kondo.

Yoji Kondo held a Ph.D. in astrophysics from the University of
Pennsylvania, headed the astrophysics laboratory at the Johnson Space Center during the Apollo and Skylab Missions, and was the NASA director of a geosynchronous satellite observatory for 15 years, among other roles. He also served as President of the International Astronomical Union’s (IAU’s) Commission on “Astronomy from Space”, as well as President of the IAU Commission on “Close Binary Stars” and the IAU Division on “Variable Stars”. In addition to numerous professional titles, he also published several science fiction books including a Star Trek novel. His avocation was Judo (6th degree black-belt) and Aikido (7th degree black belt), and he was teaching the martial arts for a few decades.

Renegades

On Thursday, February 2nd, at 11:59 PM EST, Renegades will release a confidential password for all official donors to renegades: The requiem to stream and watch part 1. This history-making dual episode finale will bring together one last time, so many wonderful actors and actresses that you have come to know and love over the years. From star trek to Xena: warrior Princess. This talented group has given us unforgettable and lasting stories and characters that have lit up the science fiction and fantasy viewing world for decades.

If you are an official Renegades donor, all you have to do right now is kick back and wait just a little longer. Your password will be emailed to you at the designated time.

If you are not an official Renegades donor and you still want to be a part of this event, there is still time to join us and become a Renegade. We have a variety of donor packages still available, with plenty of great awards that you will not be able to find anywhere else. Check us out at: WEBSITE