Understanding Climate Change: Seeing the Carbon Through the Trees
It is very likely that rising levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere resulting from human activity are increasing global temperatures and changing Earth's climate. Lawrence Livermore National Lab's Karis MacFarlane explains about the carbon cycle, ways that forests and soils store carbon, and how carbon storage and loss from forests and soils might change with changes in climate and human activity.
Understanding Climate Change: Seeing the Carbon Through the Trees |
Related Links |
The Truth about Climate Change This is a two-part documentary series presented by David Attenborough, about global warming and the surrounding controversy. |
Earth: The Climate Wars This is a three-part BBC documentary series hosted by Iain Stewart, presenting a definitive guide to the history of climate change. |
Stories in the Ice: What can Past Climate Tell Us about Our Future Drilling down thousands of meters into the ancient ice preserved on earth's massive continental ice sheets, scientists can extract a wealth of information about our climate history including periods both much colder and considerably warmer than today. |
Contemporary Climate Change as Seen Through Measurements Ralph Cicerone reviews up-to-date data on temperatures of air and water, rates of ice losses and of sea-level rise and illustrate the driving forces of greenhouse gases in an energy-balance model of Earth. |
Climate Change: The Evidence and Our Options Lonnie Thompson provides insight into the convincing evidence of climate change provided by glaciers and polar ice-caps, and the implications that inaction in the face of this rapid change will have on societies on a global scale. |