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laila [671]
3 years ago
8

Describe how carbon sequestration helps balance global warming and its significance.

Geography
1 answer:
I am Lyosha [343]3 years ago
5 0
Carbon sequestration or the removal and storage of carbon from the atmosphere plays a very important role in reducing global warming (plus the converse is true). Canada's parks, both national and provincial play an important role in this regard in the preservation of trees that absorb CO2 and give off oxygen. The Amazon rain forest is also very important in this regard. But things like clear cut logging, pine beetle forest kill-off and Amazon jungle removal have resulted in less carbon being sequestered and more global warming with its catastrophic or at least extreme weather events like flooding, drought, rampaging forest fires, etc,
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What percentage of geologic time is represented by recorded history? (Assume 5000 years for the length of recorded history.)
Ray Of Light [21]

Answer:

only about 20% - 35%

Explanation:

We do not know that much about the earth itself, and people just recently started discovering the earth for what it truly is. Though, we have been recording earthquakes and tsunamis since the early 19th century.

This makes up anywhere from 20% to 35%. It is hard to know the exact percentage for sure.

3 0
3 years ago
Geologist obtain indirect evidence about the earths interior by?
-Dominant- [34]

Answer:

Hi,

Geologists obtain indirect evidence about the earth’s interior by studying seismic waves produced.

Explanation:

Geologists are able to study the layers of the interior of the earth by observing the seismic waves patterns. The recorded data for the waves can show how the waves traveled through the earth and the path followed which will reveal the structure of the interior of the earth. The speed and magnitude of the wave can further reveal the characteristics of the earth’s interior.

Best wishes!

8 0
3 years ago
Even though much of the world's wealth resides in urban areas, that wealth is not evenly
aivan3 [116]

The uneven distribution world's wealth results in <u>economic sprawl</u>. So, option (c) or (iii): Sprawl, is the correct answer.

<h3>What is an economic sprawl?</h3>

Two undesirable urban patterns that occur during urban development are urban sprawl and income segregation.

According to empirical research, income level and inequality are both strongly connected with income segregation and urban sprawl, respectively.

Sprawl has a variety of economic disadvantages, including increased travel expenses, the diminished economic vibrancy of metropolitan areas, loss of productive farms and timberland, and loss of natural lands that sustainable tourism and wildlife-related enterprises.

Check out the link below to know more about economic sprawl;

brainly.com/question/26036664

#SPJ1

5 0
2 years ago
Adolf Hitler knew that Poland contained Jewish citizens in the 1930s.<br><br><br> True<br> False
serious [3.7K]
True. He did know that.
7 0
3 years ago
Explain how looking at the magnetism of certain rocks helps support the idea that the continents have moved and changed over tim
enyata [817]

Twenty years ago geologists were certain that the data correlated perfectly with the then-reigning model of stationary continents. The handful of geologists who promoted the notion of continental drift were accused of indulging in pseudoscientific fancy. Today, the opinion is reversed. The theory of moving continents is now the ruling paradigm and those who question it are often referred to as stubborn or ignorant. This "revolution" in our concept of the earth's character is a striking commentary on the human nature of scientists and on the flexibility that scientists allow in use of the geological data.

Plate Tectonics

The popular theory of drifting continents and oceans is called "plate tectonics."1 (Tectonics is the field of geology which studies the processes which deform the earth’s crust.) The general tenets of the popular theory may be stated as follows. The outer lithospheric shell of the earth consists of a mosaic of rigid plates, each in motion relative to adjacent plates. Deformation occurs at the margins of plates by three basic types of motion: horizontal extension, horizontal slipping, and horizontal compression. Sea-floor spreading occurs where two plates are diverging horizontally (e.g., the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and East Pacific Rise) with new material from the earth's mantle being added between them to form a new oceanic crust. Transform faulting occurs where one plate is slipping horizontally past another (e.g., the San Andreas fault of California and the Anatolian fault of northern Turkey). Subduction occurs where two plates are converging with one plate underthrusting the other producing what is supposed to be compressional deformation (e.g., the Peru-Chile Trench and associated Andes Mountains of South America). In conformity with evolutionary-uniformitarian assumption, popular plate tectonic theory supposes that plates move very slowly — about 2 to 18 centimeters per year. At this rate it would take 100 million years to form an ocean basin or mountain range.

Fitting of Continents

The idea that the continents can be fitted together like a jigsaw puzzle to form a single super continent is an old one. Especially interesting is how the eastern "bulge" of South America can fit into the southwestern "concavity" of Africa. Recent investigators have used computers to fit the continents. The "Bullard fit"2 gives one of the best reconstructions of how Africa, South America, Europe, and North America may have once touched. There are, however, areas of overlap of continents and one large area which must be omitted from consideration (Central America). There are a number of ways to fit Africa, India, Australia, and Antarctica (only one can be correct!). Reconstructions have been shown to be geometrically feasible which are preposterous to continental drift (e.g., rotation of eastern Australia fits nicely into eastern North America).3

Those who appreciate the overall fit of continents call the evidence "compelling," while others who note gaps, overlaps, or emissions remain skeptical. It is difficult to place probability on the accuracy of reconstructions and one's final judgment is largely subjective.

Sea-Floor Spreading

Evidence suggesting sea-floor spreading is claimed by many geologists to be the most compelling argument for plate tectonics. In the ocean basins along mid-ocean ridges or rises (and in some shallow seas) plates are thought to be diverging slowly and continuously at a rate of several centimeters yearly. Molten material from the earth's mantle is injected continuously between the plates and cools to form new crust. The youngest crust is claimed to be at the crest of the ocean rise or ridge with older crust farther from the crest. At the time of cooling, the rock acquires magnetism from the earth's magnetic field. Since the magnetic field of earth is supposed by many geologists to have reversed numerous times, during some epochs cooling oceanic crust should be reversely magnetized. If sea-floor spreading is continuous, the ocean floor should possess a magnetic "tape recording" of reversals. A "zebra stripe" pattern of linear magnetic anomalies parallel to the ocean ridge crest has been noted in some areas and potassium-argon dating has been alleged to show older rocks farther from the ridge crest.

There are some major problems with this classic and "most persuasive" evidence of sea-floor spreading. First the magnetic bands may not form by reversals of the earth's magnetic field. Asymmetry of magnetic stripes, not symmetry, is the normal occurrence.4 It has been argued that the linear patterns can be caused by several complex interacting factors (differences in magnetic susceptibility, magnetic reversals, oriented tectonic stresses).5

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7 0
4 years ago
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