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Agent pink

Climate Change | U.S. EPA - 0 views

    • oscar atilio
       
      Another good website.
  • Climate change is a problem that is affecting people and the environment. Greater energy efficiency and new technologies hold promise for reducing greenhouse gases and solving this global challenge. EPA's website provides information on climate change for communities, individuals, businesses, states, localities and governments.
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    The EPA Climate Change site provides comprehensive information on the issue of climate change and global warming in a way that is accessible and meaningful to all parts of society - communities, individuals, business, states and localities, and governments. The site explains climate change science, U.S.
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     this is importa because it gives small info about climate change
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    This website shows everything that is related to environment. And how we can improve it.  
oscar atilio

Global Warming -- National Geographic - 0 views

    • oscar atilio
       
      This article is short and consistent. It tell you about our mistakes. It also says in what ways will the earth change cause of global warming.
oscar atilio

Global Warming Interactive, Global Warming Simulation, Climate Change Simulation - Nati... - 0 views

    • oscar atilio
       
      Full of information.
  • What will we do to slow this warming? How will we cope with the changes we've already set into motion? While we struggle to figure it all out, the face of the Earth as we know it—coasts, forests, farms and snow-capped mountains—hangs in the balance.
  • Greenhouse effect
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  • Glaciers are melting, sea levels are rising, cloud forests are drying, and wildlife is scrambling to keep pace. It's becoming clear that humans have caused most of the past century's warming by releasing heat-trapping gases as we power our modern lives. Called greenhouse gases, their levels are higher now than in the last 650,000 years.We call the result global warming, but it is causing a set of changes to the Earth's climate, or long-term weather patterns, that varies from place to place.
  • The "greenhouse effect" is the warming that happens when certain gases in Earth's atmosphere trap heat. These gases let in light but keep heat from escaping, like the glass walls of a greenhouse.
  • First, sunlight shines onto the Earth's surface, where it is absorbed and then radiates back into the atmosphere as heat. In the atmosphere, “greenhouse” gases trap some of this heat, and the rest escapes into space. The more greenhouse gases are in the atmosphere, the more heat gets trapped.
  • Aren't temperature changes natural?The average global temperature and concentrations of carbon dioxide (one of the major greenhouse gases) have fluctuated on a cycle of hundreds of thousands of years as the Earth's position relative to the sun has varied. As a result, ice ages have come and gone.
  • Occasionally, other factors briefly influence global temperatures.  Volcanic eruptions, for example, emit particles that temporarily cool the Earth's surface.  But these have no lasting effect beyond a few years. Other cycles, such as El Niño, also work on fairly short and predictable cycles.Now, humans have increased the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by more than a third since the industrial revolution
  • Why is this a concern?The rapid rise in greenhouse gases is a problem because it is changing the climate faster than some living things may be able to adapt. Also, a new and more unpredictable climate poses unique challenges to all life.
  • As the mercury rises, the climate can change in unexpected ways. In addition to sea levels rising, weather can become more extreme. This means more intense major storms, more rain followed by longer and drier droughts (a challenge for growing crops), changes in the ranges in which plants and animals can live, and loss of water supplies that have historically come from glaciers.
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    Glaciers are melting, sea levels are rising, cloud forests are drying, and wildlife is scrambling to keep pace. It's becoming clear that humans have caused most of the past century's warming by releasing heat-trapping gases as we power our modern lives. Called greenhouse gases, their levels are higher now than in the last 650,000 years.
lulu 454

Global Warming, Carbon Dioxide, Allergies, Asthma - National Geographic - 0 views

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    In the last 100 years, the Earth's average surface temperature has risen by about 1 degree Fahrenheit (0.6 degrees Celsius), and it may climb 2.5 to 10 degrees Fahrenheit (1.5 to 6 degrees Celsius) higher by 2100, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) predicts.
Gerardo Urias

Global Warming Effects Information, Global Warming Effects Facts, Climate Change Effect... - 1 views

  • Some impacts from increasing temperatures are already happening.Ice is melting worldwide, especially at the Earth’s poles. This includes mountain glaciers, ice sheets covering West Antarctica and Greenland, and Arctic sea ice.Researcher Bill Fraser has tracked the decline of the Adélie penguins on Antarctica, where their numbers have fallen from 32,000 breeding pairs to 11,000 in 30 years.Sea level rise became faster over the last century.
    • Jimena Iraheta
       
      This 6 bullet points inform us about all of the effects happening and what will happen later to the Earth by cause of Global Warming
    • Jimena Iraheta
       
      This website says that the planet is warming everywhere, Mercury is is 1 degree Fahrenheit, the effects of rising temperature will be greater in the future.
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    The planet is warming, from North Pole to South Pole, and everywhere in between. Globally, the mercury is already up more than 1 degree Fahrenheit (0.8 degree Celsius), and even more in sensitive polar regions. And the effects of rising temperatures aren't waiting for some far-flung future. They're happening right now.
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    this is important because it tells about some effects global warming is causing
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    the effects of global warming
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    the effects of global warming
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    this link is helpfull since it gives you a lot of facts like the sea level rising  and other things like planet.
Gerardo Urias

Global Warming Solutions, Stop Global Warming - National Geographic - 0 views

  • Is this possible?Many people and governments are already working hard to cut greenhouse gases, and everyone can help.
  • In addition to reducing the gases we emit to the atmosphere, we can also increase the amount of gases we take out of the atmosphere.  Plants and trees absorb CO2 as they grow, "sequestering" carbon naturally.  Increasing forestlands and making changes to the way we farm could increase the amount of carbon we're storing.
andreita 2016

Global Warming Solutions, Is It Real? - National Geographic - 0 views

    • montse chavez
       
      In recent years, global warming has been the subject of a great deal of political controversy. As scientific knowledge has grown, this debate is moving away from whether humans are causing warming and toward questions of how best to respond.
  • In recent years, global warming has been the subject of a great deal of political controversy. As scientific knowledge has grown, this debate is moving away from whether huma
  • ns are causing warming and toward questions of how best to respond.Signs that the Earth is warming are recorded all over the globe. The easiest way to see increasing temperatures is through the thermometer records kept over the past century and a half. Around the world, the Earth's average temperature has risen more than 1 degree Fahrenheit (0.8 degrees Celsius) over the last century, and about twice that in parts of the Arctic.
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  • Although we can't look at thermometers going back thousands of years, we do have some records that help us figure out what temperatures and concentrations were like in the distant past. For example, trees store information about the climate in the place where they live. Each year, trees grow thicker and form new rings. In warmer and wetter years, the rings are thicker. Old trees and wood can tell us about conditions hundreds or even several thousands of years ago.
  • For a direct look at the atmosphere of the past, scientists drill cores through the Earth's polar ice sheets. Tiny bubbles trapped in the gas are actually pieces of the Earth's past atmosphere, frozen in time. That's how we know that the concentrations of greenhouse gases since the industrial revolution are higher than they've been for hundreds of thousands of years.
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    In recent years, global warming has been the subject of a great deal of political controversy. As scientific knowledge has grown, this debate is moving away from whether humans are causing warming and toward questions of how best to respond. Signs that the Earth is warming are recorded all over the globe.
Angelo Bianchi Borgonovo

Wind Power Information, Wind Power Facts - National Geographic - 0 views

    • Angelo Bianchi Borgonovo
       
      We could use Wind power to maek the wolrd greener :)
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    Wind Power that might help global warlming
sebastian navarrete

Environment Going Green - 0 views

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    About the show Join CNN special correspondent Philippe Cousteau this April for a half-hour show dedicated to the "Business of Green." The corporate world has a key role to play in how we deal with the challenges facing our planet.
andreita 2016

Global Warming Causes, Climate Change Causes - National Geographic - 0 views

  • What Causes Global Warming?
  • The only way to explain the pattern is to include the effect of greenhouse gases (GHGs) emitted by humans.
  • To bring all this information together, the United Nations formed a group of scientists called the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or IPCC. The IPCC meets every few years to review the latest scientific findings and write a report summarizing all that is known about global warming.
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  • One of the first things scientists learned is that there are several greenhouse gases responsible for warming, and humans emit them in a variety of ways.
  • Most come from the combustion of fossil fuels in cars, factories and electricity production. The gas responsible for the most warming is carbon dioxide, also called CO2. Other contributors include methane released from landfills and agriculture (especially from the digestive systems of grazing animals), nitrous oxide from fertilizers, gases used for refrigeration and industrial processes, and the loss of forests that would otherwise store CO2.
saul padilla

Global Warming Causes, Climate Change Causes - National Geographic - 0 views

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    "One. Two. Three. Lift!" barks Cathy Whitlock, a fossil pollen expert and paleoclimatologist at the University of Oregon. She and the three of us-two of her students and I-tighten our grips on the cold metal tube of a lake-bed drilling rig and heave. "Again," she commands.
cami tablas

global warming quiz! - 0 views

    • cami tablas
       
      china is the country that emits the most geenhouse gasses.
Agent pink

Global Warming -- National Geographic - 0 views

    • Agent pink
       
      The cycle that Global warming is changing the way the living things are living.
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    Global Warming The current cycle of global warming is changing the rhythms of climate that all living things have come to rely upon. What will we do to slow this warming? How will we cope with the changes we've already set into motion?
oscar atilio

Global Warming- Science - The New York Times - 0 views

  • Global emissions of carbon dioxide jumped by the largest amount on record in 2010,
  • Global warming has become perhaps the most complicated issue facing world leaders. Warnings from the scientific community are becoming louder, as an increasing body of science points to rising dangers from the ongoing buildup of human-related greenhouse gases — produced mainly by the burning of fossil fuels and forests.
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    global warming has increased since 2010
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    The average surface temperature of earth has increased more than 1 degree Fahrenheit since 1900 and the rate of warming has been nearly three times the century-long average since 1970. Almost all experts studying the recent climate history of the earth agree now that human activities, mainly the release of heat-trapping gases from smokestacks, tailpipes, and burning forests, are probably the dominant force driving the trend.
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    Gases
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    Interesting
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    global warming 
Nonono o Nononono

Global Climate Scam " State Approves Wind Farm near Wildlife Refuge - 0 views

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    State officials have approved a proposed 49-turbine wind farm in Eastern North Carolina that critics worry could kill migrating birds from the Pocosin Lakes National Wildlife Refuge nearby. The N.C. Utilities Commission said Thursday that it had no legal authority to reject the Pantego Wind Energy Facility, which would spread over 11,000 acres in Beaufort County.
Nonono o Nononono

Global Climate Scam " Columbus Blamed for Little Ice Age - 0 views

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    By Devin Powell By sailing to the New World, Christopher Columbus and the other explorers who followed may have set off a chain of events that cooled Europe's climate for centuries.The European conquest of the Americas decimated the people living there, leaving large areas of cleared land untended.
juaquin pelotas

Higher Temperatures | A Student's Guide to Global Climate Change | US EPA - 0 views

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    Greenhouse gases are trapping more heat in the Earth's atmosphere, which is causing average temperatures to rise all over the world. Temperatures have risen during the last 30 years, and 2000 to 2009 was the warmest decade ever recorded. As the Earth warms up, heat waves are becoming more common in some places, including the United States.
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