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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Collingwood :CSIRO Publishing,
    Keywords: Climatic changes-Australia-Congresses. ; Global warming-Congresses. ; Global temperature changes-Congresses. ; Climatic changes-Congresses. ; Climatic changes-Social aspects-Congresses. ; Greenhouse effect, Atmospheric-Australia-Congresses. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: Provides an important snapshot of the issues presented at the Greenhouse 2009 conference.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (299 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9780643100176
    DDC: 363.73874
    Language: English
    Note: Intro -- Title -- Copyright -- Foreword -- Contents -- Preface -- List of contributors -- 1. Climate change: are we up to the challenge -- 2. Climate change and the Great Crash of 2008 -- Part 1 Climate change science -- 3. Twenty years of Australian Climate Change Science Program research -- 4. Tropical Australia and the Australian monsoon: general assessment and projected changes -- 5. Recent and projected rainfall trends in south-west Australia and the associated shifts in weather systems -- 6. How human-induced aerosols influence the ocean-atmosphere circulation: a review -- 7. Freshwater biodiversity and climate change -- 8. Causes of changing southern hemisphere weather systems -- Part 2 Impacts and adaptation -- 9. Australian agriculture in a climate of change -- 10. Wheat, wine and pie charts: advantages and limits to using current variability to think about future change in South Australia's climate -- 11. Managing extreme heat in the vineyard: some lessons from the 2009 summer heatwave -- 12. Getting on target: energy and water efficiency in Western Australia's housing -- 13. Sustainable energy as the primary tool to ameliorate climate change -- 14. A national energy efficiency program for low-income households: responding equitably to climate change -- 15. Applying a climate change adaptation decision framework for the Adelaide-Mt Lofty Ranges -- 16. Responding to oil vulnerability and climate change in our cities -- 17. Managing climate risk in human settlements -- 18. Adapting infrastructure for climate change impacts -- 19. A critical look at the state of climate adaptation planning -- Part 3 Communicating climate change -- 20. Rising above hot air: a method for exploring attitudes towards zero-carbon lifestyles. , 21. Investigating the effectiveness of Energymark: changing public perceptions and behaviours using a longitudinal kitchen table approach -- 22. Talking climate change with the bush -- 23. Using Google Earth to visualise climate change scenarios in south-west Victoria -- Index.
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2018-08-10
    Description: The Kuroshio Current (KC) is the northward branch of the North Pacific subtropical gyre (NPG) and exerts influence on the exchange of physical, chemical, and biological properties of downstream regions in the Pacific Ocean. Resolving long-term changes in the flow of the KC water masses is, therefore, crucial for advancing our understanding of the Pacific's role in global ocean and climate variability. Here, we reconstruct changes in KC dynamics over the past 20 ka based on grain-size spectra, clay mineral, and Sr–Nd isotope constraints of sediments from the northern Okinawa Trough. Combined with published sediment records surrounding the NPG, we suggest that the KC remained in the Okinawa Trough throughout the Last Glacial Maximum. Together with Earth-System-Model simulations, our results additionally indicate that KC intensified considerably during the early Holocene (EH). The synchronous establishment of the KC “water barrier” and the modern circulation pattern during the EH highstand shaped the sediment transport patterns. This is ascribed to the precession-induced increase in the occurrence of La Niña-like state and the strength of the East Asian summer monsoon. The synchronicity of the shifts in the intensity of the KC, Kuroshio extension, and El Niño/La Niña-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) variability may further indicate that the western branch of the NPG has been subject to basin-scale changes in wind stress curl over the North Pacific in response to low-latitude insolation. Superimposed on this long-term trend are high-amplitude, large century, and millennial-scale variations during last 5 ka, which are ascribed to the advent of modern ENSO when the equatorial oceans experienced stronger insolation during the boreal winter.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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