Just heard a study being done about how bacteria create alot of oxygen, and new findings are suggesting that as temperatures rise those bacteria will die or have to go dormant.Interesting little addition to the whole global warming discussion I think
5/31/2007 8:10:04 PM
cant say i care
5/31/2007 8:21:06 PM
no
5/31/2007 8:35:40 PM
who cares - it won't happen in my lifetime and i don't believe in an afterlifefurthermore, if this shit was for real and not some bullshit middle-school science hysteria, we would see the governments reacting
5/31/2007 8:37:15 PM
5/31/2007 8:47:18 PM
good thing algae and phytoplankton create 90% of the earth's oxygen]
5/31/2007 8:58:59 PM
why would they all die? wouldnt bacteria multiply furthur north than normal while dying near the equator? Overall the number shouldnt change much i dont think. i could be wrong though
5/31/2007 8:59:32 PM
also with increased temperature comes increased metabolism...so at first they might create more oxygencourse there are bacteria that live deep in the oceans near hydrothermal vents who survive in multithousand degree temperatures
5/31/2007 9:02:10 PM
5/31/2007 9:04:56 PM
At lot of these are good points. Being a microbiology student I think it's interesting to see how microscopic life responds to real world scenarios, sometimes they're a benchmark of sorts.And it might not happen in our lifetime, but knowing that when it does happen we might get hit with a heat wave, tidal waves, and now a decrease in O2 is pretty disturbing
5/31/2007 9:05:52 PM
no its not you fucking idiotjesus christ i bet you wet your pants when you watched Day After TomorrowHey here's something that will really make you drop a doodie in your britches: the sun will eventually supernova and lay waste to mother earth - holy shit you better start stockpiling canned goods right now before its too late [Edited on May 31, 2007 at 9:07 PM. Reason : s]
5/31/2007 9:06:32 PM
this study sounds about as stupid as the assumptions that the polar ice caps would melt away from global warming.
5/31/2007 9:31:38 PM
farting is bad for the environment too.
5/31/2007 9:33:28 PM
wait... logical deduction (not that the global warming argument is logical) would have one conclude that, a) if temperatures rise then b) more land will be able to support agriculture. More agriculture means more plants, which means more... OXYGEN!OMG EVERYONE FREAK OUT! WE WILL DIE OF TOO MUCH OXYGEN!
5/31/2007 9:34:41 PM
this thread makes me happy, but it makes mother earth
6/1/2007 9:29:35 AM
6/1/2007 9:32:08 AM
It may or may not engulf the eartheither way, we are fried
6/1/2007 9:34:49 AM
I didn't say it would turn earth to dust, but I did say that it will lay wastewhich it willeveryone with half a clue knows that the sun will not engulf the earth
6/1/2007 9:37:25 AM
you may want to check your 'facts'.when the sun expands into a red giant, it in fact may well engulf the orbit of the earth.and it may notthey dont know yet.going red giant and going supernova are not equal.http://curious.astro.cornell.edu/question.php?number=48
6/1/2007 9:42:44 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_giantThe Sun is expected to become a red giant in about five billion years. It is calculated that the Sun will become sufficiently large to engulf the current orbits of some of the solar system's inner planets, including Earth.[5][6][7] However, the gravitational pull of the Sun will have weakened by then due to its loss of mass, and all planets but Mercury will escape to a wider orbit. That said, Earth's biosphere will be destroyed as the Sun gets brighter while its hydrogen supply becomes depleted. The extra solar energy will cause the oceans to evaporate to space, causing Earth's atmosphere to become temporarily similar to that of Venus, before the atmosphere is also lost.[8]5 ^ Red Giants. HyperPhysics (hosted by the Department of Physics and Astronomy of Georgia State University). Retrieved on 2006-12-29.6 ^ Strobel, Nick (2004-06-02). Stages 5-7. Lives and Deaths of Stars. Retrieved on 2006-12-29.7 ^ The fading: red giants and white dwarfs. Retrieved on 2006-12-29.8 ^ Pogge, Richard W. (1997-06-13). The Once and Future Sun. New Vistas in Astronomy. Retrieved on 2007-01-23.So yeah, it won't really engulf the earth, but it also isn't going to go Supernova as ^ has already pointed out.[Edited on June 1, 2007 at 9:53 AM. Reason : .]
6/1/2007 9:50:27 AM
Thats interesting. Ive not seen anything on the orbit of the earth expanding enough to guarantee it wont actually fall into the outer atmosphere of the sun, much less venus.
6/1/2007 9:55:19 AM
I think yall are missing the point. You're not going to live to see the sun go red giant/supernova/whatever. You will live to see most the ice on the poles melt. And a warmer earth does not mean more arable land, it means less. Seas will rise, more places will be in drought or become desert, and you're not gonna farm higher rocky mountains.I don't doubt the human capacity for survival to an extent...we'll probably figure out a way to keep going even if we can't live on the surface or we have to make our own oxygen, but will we want to live on such a desolate planet? Will we want future generations to curse us for destroying the environment? I don't know what the earth will look like in 150-200 years, but unless humans are wiped from the earth, I doubt it'll be as nice as it is now. I doubt you'll have the same forests and deserts and beaches that we enjoy now.
6/1/2007 9:57:31 AM
Isn't there a thread for this already?
6/1/2007 12:03:17 PM
this was moved here from the lounge
6/1/2007 12:04:03 PM
6/1/2007 12:28:14 PM
6/1/2007 12:34:07 PM
you guys think China and India are gonna go for Bush's plan? I doubt it
6/1/2007 12:44:46 PM
6/1/2007 12:52:44 PM
6/1/2007 1:03:47 PM
does that mean that China and India (who also has over 1 billion people) should be exempt from his new proposal like they were exempt from Kyoto?btw heres a link http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/breakingnews/world/view_article.php?article_id=68888
6/1/2007 1:11:14 PM
6/1/2007 1:18:02 PM
No, I don't think any nation should be exempt from Kyoto or any other climate change treaty.I also noticed that Bush said he will propose something "at the end of next year". If he proposes anything at the end of the next year, he knows it will take months or perhaps a year to negotiate an agreement on anything and..... since he will no longer be president as of Jan 2009, he is essentially saying he is not going to do anything.[Edited on June 1, 2007 at 1:22 PM. Reason : .]
6/1/2007 1:20:54 PM
6/1/2007 1:23:20 PM
6/1/2007 1:28:56 PM
I highly recommend Peter Hessler's Oracle Bones China is actually very intent on learning from our mistakes. Will they do it out of altruism? I doubt it. Will they do it because they feel it'll make them more powerful in the long run? Yup.
6/1/2007 1:31:18 PM
6/1/2007 1:55:48 PM
6/1/2007 2:04:29 PM
we really should've reduced our emissions 20,000 years ago instead of letting sea levels rise 4,800 inches
6/1/2007 2:20:10 PM
too bad most of the world's civilization didn't exist then
6/1/2007 2:30:07 PM
^^^ So erosion of coastline and flooding won't be a problem?Rising sea level even from nature DOES cause problems for people, and an increase in this rising would only make things worse.http://nmviewogc.cr.usgs.gov/viewer.htmAnd 17in would be pretty devastating for the US. In NC alone, most of dare county would be wiped out, and half of each of the coast counties, as well as most of the outer banks. 17in won't happen, but it's dumb to say it's not a big deal.^^ In that chart, the present rate of increase line seems to be higher than what it should be, by just the natural trends. [Edited on June 1, 2007 at 2:34 PM. Reason : ]
6/1/2007 2:30:29 PM
^^^ you cant use a graph to normalize trends over thousands of years, when the mass consumption of fossil fuels and the exponential rise in atmospheric rise in carbon concentrations has only occurred within the last 100 years. If you presented this as evidence at any sort of conference, this would be the time when the news crews outside would get great footage of you being thrown through the window onto the street like in an Old Western movie.[Edited on June 1, 2007 at 2:40 PM. Reason : .]
6/1/2007 2:38:05 PM
LOL, now climate conferences have resorted to tossing critics out of windows? No surprise there, considering the rabid fanaticism of some of the leading climatologists.
6/1/2007 2:44:51 PM
^^^well some of the blind faith anthro gw supporters like to believe that the earth was a completely static system before the evil oil companies came in to make trillions of CEO profits at th expense of all poor people
6/1/2007 2:55:15 PM
6/1/2007 2:58:30 PM
No, any conference would toss you out for trying pass off such spurious and invalid assertions as fact. The graph does not show the rise in sea level change or change in concentrations of greenhouse gases within the last 100 years, which is the the crux of the discussion on global warming. Unless cavemen were driving Escalades 24,000 years ago, the information has absolutely no relevant bearing to the discussion at hand. You normalize data by making the terms needlessly long in comparison to the issue being studied, so you can erase the impact of short term growth trends. It's lying with graphs.
6/1/2007 3:01:17 PM
6/1/2007 3:03:31 PM
6/1/2007 3:03:59 PM
^^^^ You're only considering one factor of a relatively complex system. You can't just look at evaporation.http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_20050427/ai_n14602213:
6/1/2007 3:10:22 PM
6/1/2007 3:21:18 PM
As I stated previously in this thread, sea levels have been rising at a fairly constant rate of 1.5 to 2.5 mm annually over the last century. The majority of this rise in sea level is due to thermal expansion. We can accurately predict future thermal expansion as a function of temperature rise, and it's just not that big of a cause for concern. All this noise about Manhattan being underwater is just fearmongering nonsense. We all love to point fingers at Bush for fearmongering, but Al Gore is just as guilty with An Inconvenient Truth.[Edited on June 1, 2007 at 3:44 PM. Reason : 2]
6/1/2007 3:43:27 PM