Sorry,
 
A little underscore between o and talks at the end of the web address made the 
whole thing collapse.
Here are, hopefully, better options
 
http://imgi.uibk.ac.at/MEhrendorfer/research/talks/o_talks/Innsbruck_DynMet_Corr2007.pdf
 
http://imgi.uibk.ac.at/MEhrendorfer/research/talks/o_talks/
 
Anders

________________________________

From: Persson Anders
Sent: Sun 16/12/2007 18:56
To: [email protected]; [email protected]; Shafer Smith
Subject: ug text recommendation


Shafer,
 
At http://imgi.uibk.ac.at/MEhrendorfer/reseach/talks/o_talks/
 
you will find some ppt-presentations of mine labled
 
"7 sins" or "Dyn Met" which address some, in my view, fundamental errors in the 
teaching of dynamic meteorology, not only today but some generations back in 
time. The emphasis has always been on the formal mathematical derivations and 
not also on the physical understanding. It seems that the idea has been that if 
you can do the mathematical derivation correctly, you have also understood the 
physics of he system.
 
Anders

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Noboru Nakamura
Sent: Thu 13/12/2007 10:19
To: [email protected]; Shafer Smith
Subject: Re: [AO discussion] ug text recommendation


Shafer,

I think the recommendation depends on your course's emphasis.  At the level you 
are aiming at, I assume "weather/climate" cannot be just fluid dynamics but has 
to present the atmosphere and ocean (plus geosphere and biosphere) as 
interacting elements of the climate system, including the radiation balance of 
the planet.  I only looked at the precursor version of Marshall and Plumb on 
the web and they seem to attempt at this, but yes perhaps at a somewhat 
advanced level.

I too in the past looked for a good undergraduate text on the subject, and I 
wasn't completely satisfied.  Wells (2nd Ed) is a decent book (albeit the 
glitches that other commentators pointed out), but it cannot be a one-stop 
reference for modern climate dynamics.  In the upper-class undergraduate course 
"Atmosphere and Ocean in Motion," I use Wallace and Hobbs (2nd Ed; the first 
two chapters are an excellent intro to climate system) and Stewart's open 
source Physical Oceanography text 
(http://oceanworld.tamu.edu/resources/ocng_textbook/contents.html 
<https://vpnserver-pub.smhi.se/http/0/oceanworld.tamu.edu/resources/ocng_textbook/contents.html>
 ) for reading assignments, but I use my own lecture notes and problem sets.  
Typical lab demonstrations include Coriolis force, sink vortex (hurricanes), 
Taylor-Proudman vs thermal winds, jetstream, and Stommel-Arons.  It will be 
good if the text fully explains the demonstrations (as in Marshall and Plumb), 
but a simple show-and-tell is usually enough to grab the students' attention; 
you can easily expand your lectures around the demos and connect with theories 
and observations.

Maybe we'll talk about these in depth at the upcoming teaching workshop.
http://geosci.uchicago.edu/~nnn/workshop/ 
<https://vpnserver-pub.smhi.se/http/0/geosci.uchicago.edu/~nnn/workshop/> 

Cheers,

Noboru Nakamura
Department of Geophysical Sciences
University of Chicago



        Shafer,
        
        Yes, I can highly recommend it since it conveys the author's great 
insight and love of the ocean system. The only black spot is a erroneous 
explanation of the Coriolis effect, following the common Hadley (1735) 
explanation, if I remember correctly. Hopefully that has changed in the new 
edition. For a correct one, consult Roland Stull's book on practical 
meteorology.
        
        Regarding the Hadley explanation, I have just had a paper accepted by 
the Roy Met Soc where I show that it not only partly wrong, but 100% wrong: the 
differences of speeds of the latitudes has NOTHING at all to do with the 
Coriolis effect.
        
        There is also a good book on dynamics of ocean and atmosphere by a 
Belgian-American author whose double name I cannot remember just now.
        
        Anders
        
        
        
        
        -----Original Message-----
        From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Remi Tailleux
        Sent: Wed 12/12/2007 10:01 PM
        To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected]
        Subject: Re: [AO discussion] ug text recommendation
        
           Hi Shafer,
        
        you may have a look at Neil Wells textbook, Atmosphere/Ocean a physical
        introduction, Wiley, which although somewhat dated (a new edition is
        underway), seems an appropriate introduction at the undergrad level you 
are
        referring to....
        
        Good luck,
        best wishes,
        Remi.
        
        On Dec 12 2007, Shafer Smith wrote:
        
        >Dear colleagues,
        >
        > I'm looking for a recommendation for an undergraduate text on
        > weather/climate. In particular, looking for something one notch (or 
half
        > notch) lower level than the new book by Marshall and Plumb. As
        > calibration, the course on which Marshall and Plumb is based at MIT 
has a
        > prerequisite of multivariate calculus and physics I; I'm shooting for
        > something appropriate to students who know 1d calculus and a little
        > physics. Ideally the course will employ rotating tank demonstrations. 
Any
        > comments or recommendations welcome!
        >
        >Thanks in advance,
        >Shafer
        >
        >
        
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