No. Global warming after the last ice age was a very slow process, over thousands of years, unlike the present warming, which is happening very quickly.
well there are a lot of reasons that we cause golbal warming. The main one I can think of is every time that you plug something in. I believe that global warming is not being caused by humans. There are just as many scientist saying that it is not happening than there are saying that it is.
absolutely nothing.... except if you're in the sun a lot... global warming just melts the ice caps and increase the water level by 40%
Not quite, though they are very closely connected. Global warming is the warming of the earth. This is causing climate change, which is the many different changes in climate that are beginning to happen.
No, global warming is happening worldwide and not just in the North Pole. The impacts of global warming are felt across the globe, including rising temperatures, melting ice caps, changing weather patterns, and sea level rise.
1000 years ago there was no global warming, just the normal warming of the earth by the sun. Global warming started when we discovered fossil fuels and started burning them seriously, at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, about 250 years ago. This burning released age-old carbon dioxide that had been hidden underground for 300 million years. Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas, so extra gas in the atmosphere captures more heat, and this is global warming.
well there are a lot of reasons that we cause golbal warming. The main one I can think of is every time that you plug something in. I believe that global warming is not being caused by humans. There are just as many scientist saying that it is not happening than there are saying that it is.
Humans contribute to climate change in various ways beyond global warming, such as through deforestation, which reduces carbon storage capacity; air pollution from fossil fuel combustion, which can impact cloud formation and precipitation patterns; and land-use changes, which alter local climate conditions and ecosystems. These impacts collectively affect the Earth's climate system in multiple ways beyond just an increase in temperature.
The Global Warming is happening too fast, but the ecosystems are trying anyway.
Yes, global warming does affect all the living creatures. Irregular weather patterns and floods in the lowlands are just but examples of how global warming affects everybody.
most likely not. just because global warming is occurring does not mean that it caused the flood. in the past flood aways happen, not just because of global warming. in my school before the charts were way up, it flooded, not because of global warming, but because the school was built on a filled up marsh.
The earth has so much severe damage. Firstly, the most hazardous of all is termed Global warming. Global warming is more severe than the others. Another just as severe damage as Global warming is Ozone depletion which I think is as severe as Global warming if not the same.
No, it just prevents an increase. Reduction of global warming has to be done through carbon sequestration, natural or man-made.
Global warming is the name given to the recent (over 200 years) gradual increase in the temperature of Earth's atmosphere.
It just depends on global warming as it is shrinking by the high temperatures that global warming has caused which means that the Aral Sea will eventually evaporate, so if climate changes and global warming stay low hopefully the Aral sea will be saved.
absolutely nothing.... except if you're in the sun a lot... global warming just melts the ice caps and increase the water level by 40%
Humidity itself does not directly contribute to global warming, but it can impact the greenhouse effect by affecting cloud formation. Higher humidity levels can lead to more cloud cover, which can trap heat in the atmosphere and contribute to global warming.
Introducing global warming to preschool children would most likely just confuse them. A complex issue like global warming or climate change should probably be saved for an older age.