Across
- 4. A critical threshold where a small alteration in a system component can produce large, potentially catastrophic overall changes.
- 7. Specific measurements taken from ice cores that serve as proxies to reconstruct past climate conditions.
- 9. A variable in climate models representing terrestrial surface reflectivity; changes to it create critical feedback loops.
- 10. The specific atmospheric layer where chemical processes, such as the production of ozone from oxygen, must be explained.
- 12. The process of reducing or ending the use of energy sources that result in CO2 emissions.
- 13. A potent greenhouse gas produced in anaerobic conditions with an atmospheric residence time of about 10 years.
- 15. Indirect data sources, such as dendrochronology or pollen from peat cores, used to build climate models.
- 17. Economic measures, such as carbon pricing, emissions trading, or subsidies, used by governments to lead climate responses.
- 18. The geological period that started 2.5 million years ago, characterized by glacial-interglacial cycles.
- 20. The process of running climate models backwards from the present to verify their accuracy against known historical data.
Down
- 1. The concept that the least responsible nations are often the most vulnerable to climate impacts.
- 2. Large-scale, deliberate interventions in the Earth’s climate system, such as space mirrors or ocean fertilization, to treat symptoms rather than causes.
- 3. The international amendment used to control hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) that were originally allowed by the Montreal Protocol.
- 5. Interactions between two or more individual tipping points that make predictions of the scale and pace of climate change highly uncertain.
- 6. Potent greenhouse gases developed to replace ODSs; they do not deplete ozone but have high global warming potential.
- 8. The political concept of a state's independent authority, which can create challenges for international climate treaties.
- 11. The proposed geological epoch characterized by human impacts that will be detectable in the future geological record.
- 14. A core issue regarding the responsibility for cumulative emissions since the Industrial Revolution and the vulnerability of different nations.
- 16. Cycles involving the shape of Earth's orbit and tilt that lead to natural climate fluctuations over tens to hundreds of thousands of years.
- 19. Reactive elements like chlorine and fluorine released into the stratosphere that actively break down ozone molecules.
