Saturday, June 1, 2019
The Ozone Layer and Climate Change Essay -- Global Warming Environment
Since the beginning of the industrial revolution early in the nineteenth century, our ability to change the conception around us has become profound. At first, the impact on our planet was almost imperceptible, but as we have grown both in twist and technological capability, that influence has grown with us. Lately, the effects of our increased activity have begun to manifest themselves in a multitude of sharp, and some not so subtle ways we have thinned the oz one and only(a) layer and may now be starting to change the very climate system upon which we and all other lifetime on Earth depend. In effect, we are experimenting with the future, but unlike performing a laboratory experiment, which nookie be scrapped and begun anew if it fails, altering the climate is something that cannot be easily undone. Whatever happens, we shall all be forced to live with the consequences for a very long time. The author of Ozone and Climate Change - A Beginners Guide, Stephen J. Reid, has manage d to put one of the most complex environmental problems into the simplest words. But as he has already mentioned, undoing what we have done to the ozone layer is not that simple. The ozone layer or ozone layer is the region of the stratosphere containing relatively high concentrations of ozone, a pale blue, highly poisonous gas with a strong odor. Ozone is formed by the action of solar ultraviolet radiation light on oxygen. Ozone at ground level is a health hazard. High concentrations of ozone at ground level are dangerous to breathe and can damage the lungs. Ozone in the upper atmosphere, however, is vital to life. The ozone layer prevents most ultraviolet and other high-energy radiation from penetrating to the earths surface but does allow finished sufficient ultraviolet rays to ... ... on this planet possible. Works CitedLunsford, Andrea A., Ruszkiewicz, John J. The Presence of Others - Third Edition. Boston/New York Bedford/St. Martins, 2000, 237-243. Reid, Stephen J. Ozone and Climate Change - A Beginners Guide. Singapore Gordon and fail Science Publishers, 2000. Christie, Maureen. The Ozone Layer - A Philosophy of Science Perspective. United Kingdom Cambridge University Press, 2001. Grundmann, Reiner. Transnational Environmental Policy - Reconstructing Ozone. London/New York Routledge, 2001. Encyclopedia.com. The Montreal Protocol. December 1, 2002. . CNN.com - Antarctic Ozone mickle Splits in Two. Richard Stenger. September 30, 2002. December 1, 2002. . EPA-OAQPS Ozone Good Up High, Bad Nearby. December 2, 2002. . An Introduction to the Science of Ozone Depletion Green Nature. December 2, 2002. .
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