As someone with a background in physics, I tend to look at what's happening around me from first principles. Or basic principles.
Today there is a lot of discussion about climate change. Thinking about the conservation of matter - ie that basically the earth contains the same materials now as it did billions of years ago - I have often wondered how the earth's atmosphere has changed over millenia. I was curious because there are lots of references to the "primeval soup" that was around when the earth "started". So I had a hunt - as you do - on Google and here's the results of that "research". Interesting....
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Friday, March 11, 2011
Thinking about Air Composition
As someone with a background in physics, I tend to look at what's happening around me from first principles. Or basic principles.
Today there is a lot of discussion about climate change. Thinking about the conservation of matter - ie that basically the earth contains the same materials now as it did billions of years ago - I have often wondered how the earth's atmosphere has changed over millenia. I was curious because there are lots of references to the "primeval soup" that was around when the earth "started". So I had a hunt - as you do - on Google and here's the results of that "research". Interesting....
Today there is a lot of discussion about climate change. Thinking about the conservation of matter - ie that basically the earth contains the same materials now as it did billions of years ago - I have often wondered how the earth's atmosphere has changed over millenia. I was curious because there are lots of references to the "primeval soup" that was around when the earth "started". So I had a hunt - as you do - on Google and here's the results of that "research". Interesting....
1 comment:
- Christopher said...
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Short answer: Yes.
I'm no physcist, but given that the earth is a closed system, the amount of atmospheric CO2 that could accumulate would equal the amount that existed at some given point in time. - March 11, 2011 at 10:04 PM
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1 comment:
Short answer: Yes.
I'm no physcist, but given that the earth is a closed system, the amount of atmospheric CO2 that could accumulate would equal the amount that existed at some given point in time.
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