Human pollution is turning the seas into acid so quickly that the coming decades will recreate conditions not seen on Earth since the time of the dinosaurs, scientists will warn today. The rapid acidification is caused by the massive amounts of carbon dioxide belched from chimneys and exhausts that dissolve in the ocean. The chemical change is placing ‘unprecedented’ pressure on marine life such as shellfish and lobsters and could cause widespread extinctions, the experts say. The study, by scientists at Bristol University, will be presented at a special three-day summit of climate scientists in Copenhagen, which opens today. The conference is intended to update the science of global warming and to shock politicians into taking action on carbon emissions. The Bristol scientists cannot talk about their unpublished results until they are announced later today. But a summary of the findings seen by the Guardian predicts ‘dangerous’ levels of ocean acidification and severe consequences for organisms called marine calcifiers, which form chalky shells. It says: ‘We find the future rate of surface ocean acidification and environmental pressure on marine calcifiers very likely unprecedented in the past 65 million years.’ The scientists add that the situation in […]
Saturday, March 28th, 2009
Carbon Emissions Creating Acidic Oceans Not Seen Since Dinosaurs
Author: DAVID ADAM
Source: The Guardian (U.K.)
Publication Date: Tuesday 10 March 2009 00.05 GMT
Link: Carbon Emissions Creating Acidic Oceans Not Seen Since Dinosaurs
Source: The Guardian (U.K.)
Publication Date: Tuesday 10 March 2009 00.05 GMT
Link: Carbon Emissions Creating Acidic Oceans Not Seen Since Dinosaurs
Stephan: When I was a much younger man, just out of University, and newly gone to work for National Geographic I went up to attend a Congressional hearing on a subject now long lost to memory. What I do remember, with an insight unrusted by time, was my sharp disappointment in the Representatives present. How can they not see, I thought at the time, what seemed so transparently obvious, and in need of immediate attention. Today I heard some senators talking about how we could not afford to deal with climate change even presuming it was real, which they were not prepared to concede or, at least, the role of human involvement. Things change but remain so much the same. But things do change, and this time our stupidity and short sighted greed may be the end of us.