PROJECTED TEMPERATURE INCREASES OVER SOUTHERN AFRICA DUE TO INCREASING LEVELS OF GREENHOUSE GASES AND SULFATE AEROSOLS

Citation
Am. Joubert et Mo. Kohler, PROJECTED TEMPERATURE INCREASES OVER SOUTHERN AFRICA DUE TO INCREASING LEVELS OF GREENHOUSE GASES AND SULFATE AEROSOLS, South African journal of science, 92(11-12), 1996, pp. 524-526
Citations number
15
Categorie Soggetti
Multidisciplinary Sciences
ISSN journal
00382353
Volume
92
Issue
11-12
Year of publication
1996
Pages
524 - 526
Database
ISI
SICI code
0038-2353(1996)92:11-12<524:PTIOSA>2.0.ZU;2-E
Abstract
Two transient climate change integrations from the Hadley Centre fully -coupled ocean-atmosphere general circulation model are considered. In the first experiment, climate is forced by greenhouse gases only. In the second experiment, the direct effects of sulphate aerosols in addi tion to greenhouse gases are included. Both experiments simulate mean temperature and temperature variability over southern Africa, during t he period 1961-1990, which are not statistically significantly differe nt from observations. Over southern Africa, warming predicted in the s ulphate experiment for the decade during which carbon dioxide doubled (2050-2059), expressed relative to 1990-1999, was 2.1 degrees C, as op posed to 3.7 degrees C in the greenhouse gas only experiment. The rate of warming over southern Africa for the seven decades between 1990 an d 2059 was 0.47 degrees C per decade in the greenhouse gas and 0.3 deg rees C per decade in the sulphate aerosol experiments. fil both cases, the rate of warming over southern Africa was greater than the global average.