Scientists find evidence in fossils and living things such as changes in morphology, genetic similarities, and transitional forms that support the theory of evolution. Fossils can show physical adaptations over time, and living organisms can reflect common ancestry through shared genetic traits. These pieces of evidence help scientists to understand the evolutionary history and relationships between different species.
The climate change in Alaska is causing the amount of animal habitats to decline, forcing Alaskan hunters to find and alternate food source. The change in climate is also causing erosion damage to houses in some areas of Alaska.
Snails may be affected by climate change as they are sensitive to changes in temperature and humidity. Changes in climate can impact their ability to find food, reproduce, and survive. However, their specific response to climate change can vary depending on the species and the specific environmental conditions they live in.
Fossils. We find fossils of tropical plants in areas that are definitely not warm today, such as Antarctica and Greenland. There are other, more complicated pieces of evidence as well, but that's one of the easiest to understand.
To use the word "solutions" in a sentence, you could say "Scientists are seeking effective solutions to address climate change." This sentence conveys the idea of scientists working on ways to solve the problem of climate change.
The InterGovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is made up of scientists around the world. They gather data and experiments from everywhere and analyse them to find out the facts about climate change.
There is no evidence proving global warming is not happening. A very tiny number of scientists (usually not climate scientists) try to find evidence but they have found nothing.There is a colossal amount of evidence proving it is happening:Temperature records rising and being broken.Sea levels rising.Ice caps and glaciers melting.Animal, bird and insect habitats changing.More unusual weather and more powerful storms.
Scientists found evidence in Rodinia in Antartica.
No, scientists neither create the climate, nor imagine the changes occurring within it. Instead, they measure the change.Some climate scientists are financially or politically motivated (generally by the fossil fuel industry) to find no correlation between human activity and climate change. Most scientists, however, lack any financial incentive to find one way or the other. Claims climate scientists not funded by the fossil fuel industry are financially invested in the outcomes of their research are simply false. In fact, climate scientists have an incentive to overturn the current findings. This is how scientists win fame and acclaim--NOT by upholding established findings.
Scientists are working to understand the impact of climate change on global ecosystems, develop sustainable energy sources to combat climate change, and find solutions to prevent the spread of infectious diseases.
East Africa
Scientists find a large amount of fossils of tropical plants and animals in a desert.
Mid-Ocean Ridge
Young Earth Creationists say there was a climate change after the biblical Flood, that this was 'the' Ice Age that scientists talk about. They say the Ice Age that must have come just over four thousand years ago explains the geological formations, such as the Grand Canyon, that clearly are the result of erosion. That view is considered totally unscientific by real scientists. They say that the world is immensely old, there was no great, world-wide Flood to be followed by an Ice Age, and that there were actually several Ice Ages over a very long period of time. There is no record of an Ice Age within recent history, and such an incredibly short period of climate change could not have left the legacy of the real Ice Ages. There was no Noah's Flood and there was no climate change to follow it.
Scientists find evidence in fossils and living things such as changes in morphology, genetic similarities, and transitional forms that support the theory of evolution. Fossils can show physical adaptations over time, and living organisms can reflect common ancestry through shared genetic traits. These pieces of evidence help scientists to understand the evolutionary history and relationships between different species.
They are important because they take the evidence that was found and they do tests on it and sometimes they can find more evidence, for example: they could find a finger print or they could find fibres that are important to the investigation.
ur neer gonna find da fucing answer