Global Warming A threat to our future
Global Warming: A threat to our future? Records show that the average temperature of the planet is climbing rapidly. Climate researchers predict the Earth's temperature will continue to rise over the next one hundred years. Scientists believe this global warming is human-generated. Warmer temperatures may lead to severe droughts and floods in some places. Animal species may not be able to survive. Vegetation will not adapt fast enough to find new habitats when heat encroaches its existing homes. Widespread famine will result in numerous deaths. Natural disasters will be as plentiful as rain. Global catastrophe is eminent. We are all going to die. Run, Chicken Little, the sky is falling! We have all heard the horror story of global warming, some of us so much that by now it seems only a fanciful tale imposed upon the world by radical environmentalists. Despite what little evidence we see of global warming in our day-to-day lives, it is a major issue in today's society. The leaders of hundreds of countries have met to discuss the problem and what is to be done about it in the future. Air emissions regulations have been put into place in many countries to reduce to the amount of CO2 being released into the atmosphere. Thousan
Climate and atmospheric history of the past 420,000 years from the Vostok ice core, Antarctica. According to a study of the global warmings that ended the last three ice ages, for example, Fischer et al. Holocene carbon-cycle dynamics based on CO2 trapped in ice at Taylor Dome, Antarctica. Nof spoke of CO2 in the atmosphere and ocean's absorption of seventy percent of it. Bibliography ReferencesCheddadi, R.
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