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Climate greenhouse effect

The Royal Society (London), The Greenhouse Effect the scientific basis for policy. Submission to the House of Lords Select Committee, 40 pp. (1989). See also Global Climate Change, Information Pamphlet (12 pp.) i.ssued by the American Chemical Society (1990) B. Hileman, Global Warming, Chem. Eng. News, April 27, 7-19 (1992) and references cited therein. [Pg.274]

Bolin, B. (1986). How much CO2 will remain in the atmosphere In "The Greenhouse Effect, Climate Change, and Ecosystems," SCOPE Report 29 (B. Bolin, B. R. D66s, J. Jager, and R. A. Warrick, eds). Wiley, Chichester. [Pg.83]

Although it is one of the smallest reservoirs in terms of water storage, the atmosphere is probably the second most important reservoir in the hydrosphere (after the oceans). The atmosphere has direct connections with all other reservoirs and the largest overall volume of fluxes. Water is present in the atmosphere in solid, liquid, and vapor forms, all of which are important components of the Earth s natural greenhouse effect. Cycling of water within the atmosphere, both physically (e.g. cloud formation) and chemically, is also integral to other biogeochemical cycles and climate. Consult Chapter 17 for more details. [Pg.115]

In addition to hydrothermal and volcanic activity, metamorphism may have influenced the CO2 levels of the atmosphere and caused climate changes. Based on a model of the Cenozoic extension in the North American Cordillera, Nesbitt et al. (1995) demonstrated that CO2 generation associated with crustal extension may have been a major contributor to the elevated CO2 levels of the Cenozoic atmosphere and the resulting global warming due to the CO2 greenhouse effect. [Pg.439]

Keywords Adaptation climate change global warming greenhouse effect infrastructure mitigation thermal energy storage weather hazard. [Pg.50]

Keywords Climate change global warming greenhouse effect emissions energy storage energy conservation sustainable future... [Pg.87]

Ramanathan V. Greenhouse effect due to chlorofluorocarbons Climatic implications. Science. 1975 190 50-52. [Pg.198]

The climate is an important aspect of the environment, an aspect that interacts strongly with the composition of the ocean and atmosphere. This interaction works in two ways Climate is influenced by composition through the greenhouse effect, and climate also influences composition through its effect on reaction rates, particularly on weathering and the flux of dissolved constituents into the sea. Full-scale climate models are exceedingly complicated and can run only on supercomputers. But here I shall demonstrate how one aspect of the climate system—average tern-... [Pg.99]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.297 , Pg.316 ]




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