The Analysis, Integration and Modeling of the Earth System project, or AIMES, is a global research project of the Future Earth. AIMES develops innovative, interdisciplinary ways to understand the structure, dynamics and evolution of the complex system composed by natural and social worlds in intimate interaction. Key foci are to understand and quantify the consequences and feedbacks of human activities and ecosystems with biogeochemical cycles and the climate system, as well as anticipatory scenario analyses informed by climate science collaborations with paleo-environmental scientists, archaeologists and historians to develop a better understanding of Earth-system changes and human-environment interactions.
There is a growing recognition within the research community that global change must be studied in a more holistic, interdisciplinary and integrated way than before. Crucial to the emergence of this perspective is the increasing awareness of two aspects of Earth-system functioning. First, that surface layers of the Earth – atmosphere, ocean and land – operate as a coupled system, within which the biosphere is a highly influential component. Second, that human activities are pervasive and profound in their consequences; they modify the physics, chemistry and biology of the Earth at the global scale, in ways that have the potential to feed back on human society. Thus humans can be considered not only as external forcings but also, more realistically, as fully embedded players in a coupled, dynamical system. This emerging perception is challenging the way in which research on the analysis and modeling of the Earth system is organized, from the level of individual research groups and institutions to the international global-change research programmes.
The integration challenge – to understand human and environmental interactions – is the driving force for AIMES with a shared goal to develop transdisciplinary approaches to understand our life-support system and our role within it.
AIMES’ Structure: AIMES’ international scientific steering committee includes representatives of diverse natural and social science communities that interact and collaborate across four integrative themes:
- Process and parameterisation studies (translating specific aspects of Earth-system processes and function to global models);
- Regional-global integration (understanding global Earth-system context to regionally-based analyses);
- Applied Earth-system science (end-to-end research to meet decision makers’ needs for integrated information);
- Integrative Earth-system modeling (development of increasingly complex coupled models of climate, biogeochemistry, ecology and human dimensions).