Yes, though only a very small amount. About 0.04%.
In the atmosphere, in the form of carbon dioxide
No. The Martian atmosphere is very thin, but it does consist mainly of carbon dioxide. Venus is the terrestrial planet with a dense atmosphere of carbon dioxide and sulfuric acid.
This gas was carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide used to make up most of Earth's early atmosphere.
Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas. More of it in the earth's atmosphere means that more heat will be retained. This will, indeed is, causing global warming.
A majority of the earths carbon is located in the ocean.
the earth atmosphere is made up of carbon dioxide and oxygen and some helium.
Producers, such as plants, remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere during photosynthesis, converting it into organic carbon. This helps regulate the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. However, deforestation and land-use changes can release stored carbon back into the atmosphere, contributing to an increase in carbon dioxide levels and impacting the carbon cycle.
carbon dioxide, sulphur dioxide and still nitrogen
Upper Part
These gases are nitrogen, oxygen, argon, carbon dioxide.