Those 2-mm layers were carbon-dated (a very accurate way of telling how long a substance has been in the ground) and carefully examined for G. bulloides.
As a result of this research, the team was able to check the intensity of monsoons for as far back as 1,000 years. And what did they discover regarding monsoons over the past one thousand years? There was a "low in monsoon wind intensity" around the year 1,600, the article reports, but since then there has been "a steady increase." And moreover, the abundance of G. bulloides shows the scientists that there has been "a more marked increase in monsoon during the past 100 years.
Researchers attribute the rise in wind intensity from monsoons over the past 100 years to global warming. The reason scientists involved with this research feel sure that global warming is causing the more intense monsoon winds because in Asia, global warming may create "a greater summertime disparity between land and ocean temperatures," according to Anderson. As a result of this contrast in temperatures, monsoon intensity logically will rise. "This study provides additional evidence of anthropogenic climate change," said Meehi. But this is not all bad news, since higher intensity of monsoon winds "might mean fewer crop failures" in Asia. But along with that possible positive note, the increased intensity of monsoons (wind and rain) could also cause flooding and erosion that could negatively affect the livelihood "of millions."
Another interesting side note of monsoons in Asia - published in the New Scientist magazine - occurred in August 2007, as political leaders in Nepal blamed India for floods in Nepal's low-lying region called Terai. This low-lying area was under water following intense monsoon rains, because, according to the Nepalese foreign ministry, India has built dams along the border with Nepal. Those dams cause the water to back up dramatically when heavy rains fall, and some of the dams are not legal, according to the story in New Scientist. The rivers that are dammed up are tributaries of the main Indian River, Ganges, which has as its source the...
Variables Variables may be: conflicting data in information sources; global warming effects on yearly rainfall, intensity of storms, barometric pressure, wind scale and direction (Rawson, p. 35), temperature of air and water, and length of seasons (Orlove, p. 233); the way that information is gathered and recorded (Morrill, p. 273); the areas in which data is recorded and the amount of data available in order to reach conclusions (Chen, p. 1979). Methods
Climate/Meteorology Nitrogen and oxygen are the most abundant gases in the Earth's atmosphere, accounting for a full 99% of its content. After these two gases, water vapor is second highest in concentration, followed by carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide. Ozone gas is also present in the atmosphere, along with a few other less common gases like Argon. The four "spheres" of the atmosphere include the troposphere, the stratosphere, the mesosphere, and
The population in Indonesia is 202,110,000, with people speaking the Javenese language. The religion of Indonesia is Sunni Muslim, and the majority of people there live to be 63 years old, with 1 out of 100 people owning cars. Indonesia is a mixed economy with many socialist institutions and central planning but with a recent emphasis on deregulation and private enterprise. Indonesia has extensive natural wealth, yet, with a large
He describes how wild grains and animals were domesticated, as well as the new technologies that made farming possible (sickles, baskets, pestles, gourds, irrigation, the wheel, the plow). He uses a chart to plot these movements. His evidence is mainly archeological, historical, and botanical with heavy doses of appeal to imaginary scenarios. Its power to convince is narrational. His ultimate point in cataloguing this change is to assert how,
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