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Miche Miche
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Posts: 334
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6 years ago
Why would coastal populations of poor countries be displaced more than wealthy nations when sea levels rise?
  What will be an ideal response?

Question 2

Explain how dark soot over the Indian Ocean increases the intensity of regional droughts
  What will be an ideal response?.

Question 3

Can the current increase in carbon dioxide level in Earths atmosphere be attributable to natural variation and not human activity? Why or why not?
  What will be an ideal response?

Question 4

How can isotopes of oxygen be used as a proxy for past temperature data?
  What will be an ideal response?

Question 5

Describe the carbon cycle.
  What will be an ideal response?
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Replies
wrote...
6 years ago
Answer to #1

ANSWER: Poor countries generally do not have the resources to build and maintain protective barriers. Annual floods and storms already contribute to many deaths in low-lying coastal areas.

Answer to #2

ANSWER: Dark soot in the cloud of pollutants over the Indian Ocean absorbs heat and warms the upper atmosphere. However, it also reduces heat to the lower atmosphere and cools the surface of the ocean, which reduces evaporation. This in turn increases the intensity of regional droughts because less moisture is available to fall as rain.

Answer to #3

ANSWER: The record of the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere over the last 800,000 years is based on air trapped in Greenland and Antarctic ice cores. Carbon dioxide levels in the distant past appear to be cyclic, showing variation from less than 200 to almost 300 parts per million (ppm). The current increase in carbon dioxide cannot be natural variation because the post-industrial levels of carbon dioxide are far higher than at any time during the past 800,000 years.

Answer to #4

ANSWER: Global temperatures of the past are often estimated using oxygen-isotope ratios (18O:16O) in sedimentary materials formed at various times. Light oxygen, 16O, has 8 protons and 8 neutrons in each atom. Much less abundant heavy oxygen, 18O, has two extra neutrons in each atom. During cooler periods, more of the water evaporated from the oceans is stored on the continents as ice and snow. Because evaporation preferentially takes the lighter 16O into the air, the oceans become slightly enriched in 18O during such periods. Because marine organisms incorporate oxygen from the seawater into their shells as they grow, their shells (CaCO3) preserve the 18O: 16O ratio of the seawater at the time. This permits estimates of the water temperature over long periods. Higher 18O in a clamshell indicates lower northern hemisphere temperatures at the time the shell grew, because more of the water had evaporated from the oceans to form the continental glaciers. Studies show that, in general, an increase of one part per million of 18O: 16O means 1.5C higher temperature at the time of evaporation. Sediment cores from lakes or oceans can provide oxygen-isotope data up to about 5 million years ago. The snow that falls during any given year also preserves the record of the oxygen-isotope ratio for the ocean water at that time. Near the poles, where snow never melts, annual layers of snow accumulate in thick deposits of glacial ice. Scientists can drill into these deposits to obtain a cylinder of glacial ice, called an ice core, to determine isotope ratios over hundreds of thousands of years. Temperature changes in the Antarctic for the past 420,000 years were determined by analyzing oxygen-isotope ratios from the Vostok ice core of 1996 by the former Soviet Union and France.

Answer to #5

ANSWER: On land, carbon is held as biomass, in live plant material, and in dead material on the ground and in the soil. During photosynthesis, plants take up CO2 from the atmosphere and release oxygen while growing, the amounts varying by season. The addition of CO2 due to human activities is significantly larger than the plants and oceans can take up; thus, these activities add carbon into the atmosphere.
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