The person who fist saw planet Uranus is WilliamHerschel.Actually John Flamsteed saw it first, but he didn't realiseit was a planet.
The term "global warming" was first used in a 1975 scientific paper by Wally Broecker, an American geoscientist. It became widely popular in the late 20th century to describe the observed increase in Earth's average surface temperature due to human activities releasing greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
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A recent poll of American attitudes, undertaken by the Pew Research Center, showed that only 33 per cent did not believe that global warming is real, while only 17 per cent said that global warming is not a problem. These responses are somewhat contradictory, since you would expect that eveyone who answered that global warming is not real would also answer that it is not a problem. Nevertheless, it is the 17 per cent who are genuinely unconcerned, plus perhaps a further 15 per cent who saw it as a problem, but not too serious. If only 17 to 32 per cent of the general population see no reason to be concerned about global warming, then our perceptions of widespread views that it is not a problem really result from the statements of a small but vocal minority, including those with vested interests.
You can't. Global warming is a natural, cyclic event that has happened before, and animal life survived. The planet is actually going through a cooling term now.A:Animals whose habitats are seriously affected by global warming have to adapt, move or die. It will be difficult to stop global warming as we have left it so late, and our interventions are well below what nations have promised. It will not be possible to save many animals.
The first time I saw them was at Place De Nation
It was warming, not burning.
It was warming, not burning.
you could say "when i saw his fist clench, I thought he was going to hurt me"
It was warming, not burning.
No doubt humans will survive, no matter what we do to the world, but scientists do predict widespread species extinctions, so from that point of view, global warming is indeed deadly. Heatstroke does kill people occasionally, generally the very young or elderly. This can occur because a small average increase in temperatures can really mean a major, short-term temperature increase such as we saw in Moscow, when temperatures soared above 100 degrees Fahrenheit for the first time on record and remained above 100 degrees for several days. Major floods also contribute to human casualties. Droughts can cause starvation and consequent deaths. To the extent that these causes result from global warming, it can be deadly.
Plants reduce global warming by absorbing the carbon dioxide that causes global warming. Annuals release the CO2 they absorb. Deciduous tree leaves take up billions of tons of CO2 each spring, but release that CO2 back into the air each fall as they die and rot. Trees in general pull CO2 out of the air, and hold if for hundreds of years. It takes energy to harvest those trees, saw them into lumber, and build homes out of them. But in general trees are a good way to sequester atmospheric carbon.