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Greenhouse Effect
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The greenhouse effect refers to the process by which certain gases in Earth's atmosphere trap heat from the sun, raising surface temperatures and sustaining conditions that support life on the planet. When human activity amplifies this natural process — primarily through emissions of carbon dioxide and methane linked to industrialization — it becomes a driver of global warming and broader climate disruption. Students across environmental science, ecology, public policy, and even rhetoric and composition courses engage with this topic because it sits at the intersection of atmospheric chemistry, economic cost, and urgent political debate.

The papers archived here approach the greenhouse effect from several distinct angles. Many focus on the direct relationship between greenhouse gases and global warming, examining how carbon dioxide and methane accumulate in the atmosphere and alter weather patterns and climate systems. Others take an ecological lens, assessing environmental and toxicological impacts on ecosystems. Policy-oriented essays address behavioral and regulatory responses, including arguments for changing industrial practices, while persuasive writing assignments use the topic to practice structured argumentation frameworks. Some papers also explore the economics of inaction, weighing the long-term cost of neglecting the complexities of climate change.

A strong essay on the greenhouse effect needs a focused, arguable thesis rather than a general survey of the problem. Evidence drawn from atmospheric science — explaining how specific gases trap heat and what measurable changes result — carries the most weight. Grounding claims in specific mechanisms, such as the role of industrialization in accelerating emissions, strengthens credibility. The most common pitfall is conflating the natural greenhouse effect with its human-amplified version, so distinguishing between the two processes early in the essay is essential for analytical precision.

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Paper Undergraduate
Strategic Thinking in Today\'s Global
In today's global business environment, strategy and change necessarily go hand in hand. It is impossible to operate in a business environment without taking into account the dynamics of change.
Paper Masters
Behavioral Changes: Reducing the Effects
Behavioral Changes: Reducing the Effects of Global Climate Change Introduction – What is Global Warming? The world's climate has been changing since the late 19th century and it has been changing dramatically for the past fifty years, according to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Temperatures are rising, glaciers are melting around the world, the ice cap in the Arctic is melting, ocean temperatures are slowly rising, sea levels are rising around the world, and there are dramatic changes being witnessed in the way the world's plants and animals are responding to the rise in temperatures. The EPA explains that the greenhouse effect is at the heart of the global warming issue. It is perfectly natural for the sun to heat the earth, and a good share of that heat is then trapped in the Earth's atmosphere by clouds (water vapor and carbon dioxide). However the activities of humans have added greenhouse gases to the atmosphere in heavy amounts, which has been one of the main drivers of global warming, the EPA continues. The burning of fossil fuels like coal, oil, and natural gas contribute mightily to excessive greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. Those gases are trapped in the atmosphere and result in the fact that the earth's temperature has risen by 1.3°F over the last 100 years. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), an organizations founded by the United Nations that includes over 100 scientists from all parts of the world, presents frequent updated empirical data on the issue. The data from the IPCC that shows that the global atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide has increased from a "pre-industrial value of about 280 ppm (parts per million) to 379 ppm in 2005 (IPCC). The bottom line is – notwithstanding some media commentators and a few elected officials that have either been influenced by the right wing propaganda that denies global warming or are simply out of touch – global warming is very real. Global climate change has been proven through rigorous empirical research conducted by thousands of scientists worldwide, and global warming indeed poses an enormous threat to the planet.
Paper Doctorate
Earth science information, age, and technology
The recent earthquake and tsunami that beset Japan last March 11, 2011 made people around the world aware of the effects faults in bringing about these disasters. Faults are fractures or cracks in the earth's crust that…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Managing Natural Resources - Natural
Natural gas is a non-renewable energy source. It is often found with oil. Natural gas makes up a significant proportion of the energy used by the United States. Effective management of this energy source is vital.
Paper Undergraduate
Environmental policies and their implementation
Give an example of an ecosystem and use this example to describe the concepts of "input-output," "source-sink relationship," and feedback.
Paper Undergraduate
Current events and disasters at local, state, national, and international levels
The great American scientist Benjamin Franklin mentioned an old proverb - "an ounce of prevention is worth more than a pound of cure." Two current events affecting the world could learn from this wise adage.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Environmental issues and their global impact
Explain the greenhouse effect. What are the most important greenhouse gases?
Paper Masters
Climate Change: The Greatest Challenge for American Planning
More and more each day, there is becoming ample indication of the more ecological impacts of recent climate change, from polar terrestrial to tropical marine environments 20 years from now. The answers of both flora and fauna expand a collection of environments and structural hierarchies, from the species to the community levels of community. Despite the continued doubt as to community and ecosystem routes which are under global change, this paper will expose a clear pattern of ecological change that is across systems and what it will be like 20 years from now. Even though we are only at a stage that is early in the predictable tendencies of global warming, ecological replies to recent climate change are previously obviously visible.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Global warming: causes, effects, and mitigation strategies
Global Warming: All Hyped Up With Nowhere to Go
Paper Doctorate
Greenhouse Gases and Global Warming
As of late, global warming has been in the headlines. After Climategate questioned current assumptions about the main driver in Earth's climate, original decrees that "debate is over" have not held as much sway as…