Student 1
Student
Professor
English
Date
Annotated Bibliography:
Impacts of Global Warming
Del Sole, Timothy, Xiaoqin Yan, Paul A. Dirmeyer, Mike Fennessy, and Eric Altshuler.
"Changes In Seasonal Predictability Due To Global Warming." Journal Of Climate 27.1
(2014): 300-311. Academic Search Complete. Web. 12 Feb. 2014. This article talks about
how the predictability of monthly mean temperatures will change in future climates
according to a Community Climate System Model. It talks about some of the changes in
predictions such as how the southern peninsula of Africa and northeast South America
might experience drying in the future. Timothy DelSole has a PhD from Harvard
University. He is a research scientist who studies climate variability. Xiaoqin Yan is a
Doctoral Candidate and Research Assistant at Purdue University in the Department of
Pharmacy Practice. Paul Dirmeyer has a PhD from the University of Maryland and is a
research scientist for the role of land surface in the climate system. Mike Fennessy has a
M.S. from State University of New York. He is a research scientist for the study of the
impact of tropical and global boundary conditions on the predictability of the atmosphere.
Eric Altshuler has a M.S. from the University of Maryland at College Park and is a
research scientist who performs dynamical seasonal predictability experiments. This
article focuses on another impact of global warming which is the change in global climate
patterns.
Strand 2
Doney, Scott C., Victoria J. Fabry, Richard A. Feely, and Joan A. Kleypas. "Ocean
Acidification: The Other CO2 Problem." Marine Life 1 (2009): n. pag. 29 Aug. 2008.
Web. 10 Feb. 2014. This article talks about the impacts of rising atmospheric carbon
dioxide on the ocean. It talks about how acidification alters seawater chemical speciation
and impacts shell-forming organisms in the ocean. Scott Doney is know for marine
chemistry and geochemistry and works at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
Victoria Fabry is a professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at California State
University. Richard Feely works at the Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory and is
a professor in the Department of Oceanography at the University of Washington. Joan
Kleypas works at the Institute for the Study of Society and Environment. This article
talks about other impacts that the greenhouse gas effect might have on our plant which
means there still might be a valid need for changing our habits with how resources are
used.
Roberts, James M. "How Western Environmental Policies Are Stunting Economic Growth in
Developing Countries." Journal of Oil Palm & The Environment 2 (n.d.): n. pag. 2011.
Web. 11 Feb. 2014. This article about how governments are using environmentalist
movements to justify imposing protectionist no-tariff barriers on developing countries. It
then talks about the impacts of these on th.
1. Student 1
Student
Professor
English
Date
Annotated Bibliography:
Impacts of Global Warming
Del Sole, Timothy, Xiaoqin Yan, Paul A. Dirmeyer, Mike
Fennessy, and Eric Altshuler.
"Changes In Seasonal Predictability Due To Global Warming."
Journal Of Climate 27.1
(2014): 300-311. Academic Search Complete. Web. 12 Feb.
2014. This article talks about
how the predictability of monthly mean temperatures will
change in future climates
according to a Community Climate System Model. It talks about
some of the changes in
2. predictions such as how the southern peninsula of Africa and
northeast South America
might experience drying in the future. Timothy DelSole has a
PhD from Harvard
University. He is a research scientist who studies climate
variability. Xiaoqin Yan is a
Doctoral Candidate and Research Assistant at Purdue University
in the Department of
Pharmacy Practice. Paul Dirmeyer has a PhD from the
University of Maryland and is a
research scientist for the role of land surface in the climate
system. Mike Fennessy has a
M.S. from State University of New York. He is a research
scientist for the study of the
impact of tropical and global boundary conditions on the
predictability of the atmosphere.
Eric Altshuler has a M.S. from the University of Maryland at
College Park and is a
research scientist who performs dynamical seasonal
predictability experiments. This
article focuses on another impact of global warming which is
the change in global climate
patterns.
3. Strand 2
Doney, Scott C., Victoria J. Fabry, Richard A. Feely, and Joan
A. Kleypas. "Ocean
Acidification: The Other CO2 Problem." Marine Life 1 (2009):
n. pag. 29 Aug. 2008.
Web. 10 Feb. 2014. This article talks about the impacts of rising
atmospheric carbon
dioxide on the ocean. It talks about how acidification alters
seawater chemical speciation
and impacts shell-forming organisms in the ocean. Scott Doney
is know for marine
chemistry and geochemistry and works at Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution.
Victoria Fabry is a professor in the Department of Biological
Sciences at California State
University. Richard Feely works at the Pacific Marine
Environmental Laboratory and is
a professor in the Department of Oceanography at the
University of Washington. Joan
Kleypas works at the Institute for the Study of Society and
Environment. This article
talks about other impacts that the greenhouse gas effect might
have on our plant which
4. means there still might be a valid need for changing our habits
with how resources are
used.
Roberts, James M. "How Western Environmental Policies Are
Stunting Economic Growth in
Developing Countries." Journal of Oil Palm & The Environment
2 (n.d.): n. pag. 2011.
Web. 11 Feb. 2014. This article about how governments are
using environmentalist
movements to justify imposing protectionist no-tariff barriers
on developing countries. It
then talks about the impacts of these on the developing
countries such as a resurgence of
malaria and the endangerment of millions of jobs. James M
Roberts is The Heritage
Foundation’s expert in economic freedom and growth. He
studies economic and
political issues and is in the middle of earning a doctorate in
public policy at the
Alexandria campus of Virginia Tech. This article focuses on the
negative impacts the
environmental policies have on developing countries.
5. Student 3
Singh, Udayan. "Carbon Capture And Storage: An Effective
Way To Mitigate Global Warming."
Current Science (00113891) 105.7 (2013): 914-922. Academic
Search Complete. Web.
12 Feb. 2014. This article discusses how carbon dioxide is
leading to global warming and
the methods to reduce carbon dioxide emissions. It focusses on
the idea to capture and
store emitted carbon dioxide and explores several methods to do
this such as post-
combustion separation and oxyfuel separation. Udayan Singh
works for the Department
of MEchanical Engineering and also the National Institute of
Technology in India. This
article is supports the idea that carbon dioxide is a cause for
global warming, but puts its
emphasis on a solution to carbon dioxide emissions instead of
just proving that they are
the cause.
Solomon, Susan, Gian-Kasper Plattner, Reto Knutti, and Pierre
Friedlingstein. "Irreversible
6. Climate Change Due to Carbon Dioxide Emissions."
Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 106.6
(2008): n. pag. 16 Dec. 2008.
Web. 11 Feb. 2014. This article focuses on climate change due
to increased carbon
dioxide concentration and how it is pretty much irreversible
even after the emissions stop.
It talks about the impacts of this such as dry-season rainfall
reductions and the rising on
the sea level. Susan Solomon is an atmospheric chemist. She is
a Professor of
Atmospheric Chemistry and Climate Science at the
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. Gian-Kasper Plattner is Deputy Head, Director of
Science, and Climate and
Environmental Physicists at the University of Bern,
Switzerland. Reto Knutti is a
professor at the Institute for Atmospheric and Climate Science
in Switzerland. Pierre
Friedlingstein is a professor and Chair in Mathematical
Modeling of Climate Systems at
7. Strand 4
the University of Exeter. This article talks about the impacts of
carbon dioxide which is
a much blamed gas when in comes to global warming.
Tranter, Bruce. "The Great Divide: Political Candidate And
Voter Polarisation Over Global
Warming In Australia." Australian Journal of Politics & History
59.3 (2013): 397-413.
Academic Search Complete. Web. 12 Feb. 2014. This article
talks about global warming
on a political level. It talks about how public opinion on global
warming has a lot to do
with what political party a person identifies themselves with. It
has survey data to support
this idea about Australian political parties. Bruce Tranter is a
professor at the University
of Tasmania in Sociology. This article focuses on how people’s
opinions of global
warming can be influenced on other things than just the facts,
such as which political
party someone identifies with.
8. Annotated Bibliography Definition
Definitions:
annotate, v. -
1. trans. To add notes to, furnish with notes (a literary work or
author).
"annotate, v." OED Online. Oxford University Press, June 2014.
Web. 24
June 2014.
bibliography, n. - 2. The systematic description and history of
books, their
authorship, printing, publication, editions, etc. 4. A list of the
books of a
particular author, printer, or country, or of those dealing with
any particular
theme; the literature of a subject.
"bibliography, n." OED Online. Oxford University Press, June
2014. Web.
24 June 2014.
Annotated Bibliography – “An annotated bibliography is a list
of sources
(arranged alphabetically by author) that you plan to consult and
make use of
in your research paper. Typically you provide a citation..., and a
short
summary of the source. You can present all your sources in one
long list or
organize them by type of sources.
9. Greene, Stuart, and April Lidinsky, eds. From Inquiry to
Academic Writing, Second
Edition. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2012. Print.
*For the purpose of this assignment, you will organize yours
according
to the databases you have chosen.
Bibliography Outline
An Annotated Bibliography will include all (4) of these areas
for EACH
ENTRY:
• Cite: Location of your source
o Format in MLA
• Summary: Summarize your source
o List the main argument(s)
• Assessment: Evaluate author(s)
o List the author’s academic ethos
• Reflection: Think about the source’s purpose
o Tell how the source relates to the topic. (Don’t write “ I ”)
10. Annotated Bibliography
Compose an Annotated Bibliography of at least six (6) sources
that you are planning to cite in your literature review.
Be sure to follow MLA guidelines (see your textbook or
handbook for more information).
Remember that these sources need to be scholarly, peer-
reviewed articles or books.
_____________________________________________________
____________________
I chose those Articles: just do two not all six
1.
https://search.proquest.com/docview/208269176?accountid=730
5
2. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF01544216