That's a good question. I first started hearing about going green in the early to mid 90s. In my opinion going green hasn't been going on nearly long enough.
the green roof are always there
The Greenhouse effect started long before humans were on Earth. The Greenhouse effect is only intensified by the presence of humans.
Weather is a short term change to the climate, but not to the greenhouse effect. Climate is a long term change to the weather (but not to the greenhouse effect).
Not solely. There is a natural greenhouse effect that is supported by the earth's carbon and water cycles. This has kept the earth warm enough for life for millions of years.However, humans have been burning fossil fuels since the beginning of the Industrial Age (1750s). This releases long-held carbon dioxide that has been sequestered away for 300 thousand years. This extra greenhouse gas is changing the greenhouse effect into an enhanced greenhouse effect, which is causing global warming and climate change.
Humans have been burning fossil fuels since the beginning of the Industrial Age (1750s). This releases long-held carbon dioxide that has been sequestered away for 300 thousand years. This extra greenhouse gas is changing the greenhouse effect into an enhanced greenhouse effect, which is getting warmer and warmer.
The trapping by the greenhouse gases of the long wavelength radiation (infrared) leads to more heating and a higher resultant temperature.
The Greenhouse effect started long before humans were on Earth. The Greenhouse effect is only intensified by the presence of humans.
Yes. Humans have been burning fossil fuels since the beginning of the Industrial Age (1750s). This releases long-held carbon dioxide that has been sequestered away for 300 thousand years. This extra greenhouse gas is changing the greenhouse effect into an enhanced greenhouse effect, which is getting warmer and warmer.
Weather is a short term change to the climate, but not to the greenhouse effect. Climate is a long term change to the weather (but not to the greenhouse effect).
Not solely. There is a natural greenhouse effect that is supported by the earth's carbon and water cycles. This has kept the earth warm enough for life for millions of years.However, humans have been burning fossil fuels since the beginning of the Industrial Age (1750s). This releases long-held carbon dioxide that has been sequestered away for 300 thousand years. This extra greenhouse gas is changing the greenhouse effect into an enhanced greenhouse effect, which is causing global warming and climate change.
Burning fossil fuels releases long-hidden carbon dioxide into the other greenhouse gases overloading the greenhouse effect.
No. The greenhouse effect is the process by which certain gasses, called greenhouse gasses, help to trap heat within Earth's atmosphere. This effect has been in place for as long as Earth has had an atmosphere and is necessary for life to exist. Without it, the planet would freeze over. Global warming is primarily the result of an enhanced greenhouse effect, caused by extra geenhouse gasses entering the atmosphere.
Burning fossil fuels releases long-held carbon that had been hidden for millions of years.This extra carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas that is too much for the greenhouse effect and the carbon cycle to deal with.The greenhouse effect becomes the runaway greenhouse effect.This causes global warming.
The greenhouse effect maintains temperature. Another word for a greenhouse is "hothouse." Without the greenhouse effect of our atmosphere, earth's surface would be more like that of the moon--baked during the day and cold at night. Just not quite as severe, as the lunar day is a month long.
Humans have been burning fossil fuels since the beginning of the Industrial Age (1750s). This releases long-held carbon dioxide that has been sequestered away for 300 thousand years. This extra greenhouse gas is changing the greenhouse effect into an enhanced greenhouse effect, which is getting warmer and warmer.
The trapping by the greenhouse gases of the long wavelength radiation (infrared) leads to more heating and a higher resultant temperature.
The Greenhouse effect is an ongoing cyclic event. It takes hundreds of thousands of years for one cycle. We are currently on the sixth known warming cycle we have data on. Without this effect the planet would be very cold and dead.
Long-wave infrared radiation from clouds and the warm surface of the earth.