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Global Warming Facts and Our Future
  CARBON CYCLE

The Natural Carbon Balance

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Carbon continually exchanges within a closed system consisting of the atmosphere, oceans, biosphere, and landmass. There are short- and long-term cycles at work.

Short-Term Cycles:
Carbon is exchanged rapidly between plants and animals through respiration and photosynthesis, and through gas exchange between the oceans and the atmosphere.

Long-Term Cycle:
Over millions of years, carbon in the air is combined with water to form weak acids that very slowly dissolve rocks. This carbon is carried to the oceans where some forms coral reefs and shells. These sediments may be moved deep into the Earth by drifting continents and eventually released into the atmosphere by volcanoes.

THE EARTH'S CARBON CYCLE
Graphic of the greenhouse gases
The Earth maintains a natural carbon balance. When concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2) are upset, the system gradually returns to its natural state through the processes shown here. These natural processes work slowly, compared to the rapid rate at which humans are moving carbon into the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels. Natural carbon removal can't keep pace, so the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere is increasing.

OCEAN UPTAKE ­ Dissolving of CO2 gas into the oceans and inflow of carbon carried from land by rivers.
OCEAN RELEASE ­ Return of carbon in the oceans directly back to the atmosphere as CO2 gas.
SEDIMENTATION ­ Slow burial of plant and animal matter on land and on the ocean floor, which eventually becomes limestone, coal, gas, and oil.
RESPIRATION ­ Slow combustion of carbon compounds, producing energy within organisms and releasing CO2.
PHOTOSYNTHESIS ­ Conversion of CO2 into energy-rich carbon compounds by plants.


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Upsetting the Balance [ next ]

 

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