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Climate Change(d)?

TSwizzle gets up in his climate controlled house, gets into his climate controlled car, and goes to work [n a climate controlled building. Life is bod no worries in his climatge cotroled world.
 
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/22/...e_code=1.308.pN7N.XsXFU3GgGXjD&smid=url-share

Daniel Nepstad first set fire to the Amazon rainforest in 1985.

He was a young researcher at the time, studying how tropical forests remained so lush, even during the dry season. “I became obsessed with the incredible ability of these forests to endure drought,” he said.

After years of experiments, including numerous attempts to intentionally light the Amazon aflame, he arrived at a surprising conclusion: “Forests are pretty hard to burn down.”

Much has changed since then.

As climate change has pushed global temperatures to record levels, the Amazon has become increasingly combustible, creating years of rolling environmental crisis.

Persistent heat makes it harder for vegetation to retain moisture, which in turn makes it easier for forests to burn. On top of that, the vast majority of fires in the Amazon are set by humans, particularly by farmers clearing land for agriculture. Fire begets fire.

Last year, a record amount of tropical primary forests burned around the globe, according to the World Economic Forum, five times as much as the prior year’s level of forest loss. In the Amazon, fires consumed an area larger than California.

Now Mr. Nepstad is returning to the Amazon to try to stop fires in a region that scientists have identified as a critical bulwark against global warming.

“Fire is the biggest threat to the Amazon, but it’s also a problem that’s possible to solve,” Mr. Nepstad said. “This is the biggest climate solution that could happen over the next few years.”

Working through his own nonprofit organization, the Earth Innovation Institute, along with a coalition of other groups, local business leaders and international research groups, Mr. Nepstad is trying to encourage small shifts in behavior that might help stop fires before they begin.

The changes he is asking farmers to make can be modest: planting different crops, letting forests return and pooling resources to afford machinery that can clear land instead of resorting to intentional burns. Yet in the aggregate, he believes these modifications can have a major effect.

The article is long and I'm "gifting" it. It's tragic what human activity is doing and has done to the Amazon. It's a sad but interesting read, so I hope the posters who actually believe and understand science will read it. I'm just quoting a little to give you an idea of what is happening in the some of the most important rain forests in the world. It is good to see that someone is hopeful that if he can inspire change, perhaps the damage will slow down.

Fires in Brazil have grown worse in recent years. Last year, they swept across the Pantanal, the world’s largest wetlands. After seasonal rains failed to materialize last year, a record number of fires charred the Amazon. Five years earlier, in 2019, another bad fire season consumed vast tracts of land.

All these blazes present myriad challenges. When virgin rainforest burns, it takes a toll on biodiversity. When agricultural land burns, it affects the livelihoods of the more than 40 million people who live in the Amazon.

The fires also release vast quantities of stored carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, accelerating global warming.

This marks a stark reversal of an age-old trend. In recent centuries, the Amazon acted like a filter, absorbing many of the planet-warming emissions from the burning of fossil fuels like coal, oil and gas.

But some of this area is no longer a reliable carbon sink. In recent years, parts of the Amazon that have been developed into farmland, including the area where Mr. Nepstad started his career, now produce more carbon dioxide than they absorb.

Left unchecked, scientists warn that the loss of Amazon to fire and deforestation could lead to irreversible changes, leading to much of the forest giving way to grasslands and further accelerating global temperature rise.

There is much more to read about the problems in the Amazon rain forests. Only a fool would deny that human influence is causing this problem. Humans have a long history of destroying their own habitats, and sadly we harm or destroy a lot of very important species with our behavior, even if we don't realize what we are doing. Sadly, people don't like to change their behavior and that's made it very difficult to stop what's happening to the environment due to human activity.
 
Fizzle, let us start with the basics.

1 + 1 = 2
1 + 2 = 3
1 + 3 = 4

When cold and warm air meets cold air sinking and warm air rising creates storms.

The greater the temperature difference the stronger the storm.

Warmer average air temperature means stronger storms.

Getting the hang of it now? Even a few degrees rise in average temperature has a big effect.

In lesson 2 we will cover energy represented for a temperature rise with a mass of air.

For your homework open the book and look at the equation q = m*c*dT for the next class. And write the above 100 times on a whiteboard.

:rofl:
 
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