Course Identification

The Carbon Cycle
20222161

Lecturers and Teaching Assistants

Prof. Dan Yakir
Dr. Eshkol Eytan

Course Schedule and Location

2022
First Semester
Monday, 14:15 - 16:00, Schmidt, Auditorium
27/10/2021
18/03/2022

Field of Study, Course Type and Credit Points

Chemical Sciences: Lecture; Elective; Core; 3.00 points
Life Sciences: Lecture; Elective; Regular; 3.00 points

Comments

This course will be recorded

The first lecture will be held at room 404, Perelman building, this Wednesday, Oct 27th.

Prerequisites

No

Restrictions

20

Language of Instruction

English

Registration by

10/10/2021

Attendance and participation

Obligatory

Grade Type

Numerical (out of 100)

Grade Breakdown (in %)

10%
45%
45%

Evaluation Type

Other

Scheduled date 1

N/A
N/A
-
N/A

Estimated Weekly Independent Workload (in hours)

3

Syllabus

The course is intended for students from chemistry and biology but can be attended by any WIS student. The Carbon Cycle discusses this global essential biogeochemical driver that links the biosphere, geosphere, atmosphere and Earth's climate system. In this graduate level primer for students from different backgrounds, we will review and discuss the many ways the global carbon cycle is operating on different time and spatial scales. From the million-year time scales, where feedbacks in the carbon cycle stabilize the Earth's climate and oxygen concentrations, to the human-relevant time scale of minutes to decades. the later part will also connect to the present day carbon cycle that has been dampening climate change by absorbing carbon dioxide from fossil-fuel into the oceans and the land biosphere. In this framework we will explore the interactions of biological, chemical, and physical processes, with emphasis on the contemporary C cycle on land. Finally we will attempt to address questions of the role of the carbon cycle in the current global warming and other trends in global change.

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this course students should be able to:

  1. Demonstrate understanding of the concept of Earth System Science.
  2. Describe scaling of processes from cellular to global scales.
  3. Recognize the different time scales of operation of the carbon cycle (from seconds to million years).
  4. Link between the operation of the carbon cycle to the climate on Earth.

Reading List

Will be provided in the course website.

Website

N/A