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Greenhouse Gases
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Greenhouse gases are compounds in Earth's atmosphere — including carbon dioxide, methane, and water vapor — that trap heat and regulate surface temperatures. Students write about this topic across a wide range of disciplines, from earth science and environmental studies to political economy and policy analysis. What makes greenhouse gases academically compelling is their position at the intersection of atmospheric chemistry, ecosystem health, and human decision-making. The topic demands that writers understand both the physical mechanisms driving temperature increase and warming, and the social systems that produce or respond to those changes.

The student papers archived on this topic approach greenhouse gases from several distinct angles. Some focus on cause-and-effect relationships, examining how deforestation or air transport emissions contribute to atmospheric change. Others take a policy or political economy lens, analyzing how climate change connects to sustainability frameworks, integrated air quality regulations, or green business models. Still others ground the topic in specific environmental contexts, such as watershed ecosystems or the role of alternative fuels, moving between local case studies and global warming trends. This range reflects how broadly the subject spreads across scientific and social science coursework.

A strong essay on greenhouse gases needs a clearly scoped thesis — arguing, for instance, that a specific sector drives disproportionate emissions, or that a particular policy framework inadequately addresses atmospheric warming. Evidence drawn from measurable climate data, ecosystem impacts, or documented policy outcomes tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating "climate change" as the thesis itself rather than as context; the argument should stake a specific, debatable claim about causes, consequences, or solutions.

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Paper Doctorate
Ruddiman Plows Annotation of W.F.
Ruddiman's principal claim is that human effect on climate change did not begin in the 1800s as most scientists accept, but began thousands of years before in slow gradual changes whose impact equals that of the…
Paper Undergraduate
Disasters, the Environment, and Public
James N. Logue's Disasters, the Environment, and Public Health: Improving Our Response focuses on the 1990 decade as a time of realization of the environmental threat and an intensification of our efforts to resolve…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Environmental ethics: social, economic, and political aspects
Ethics and Morality in Matters of the Planet and its Peoples
Paper Doctorate
Hydrogen fuel as an alternative energy source
Hydrogen is one of two natural elements that combine to make water. Hydrogen is not an energy source, but more an energy carrier because it takes a lot of energy to remove it from water.
Paper Doctorate
Economic and environmental effects of solar energy
Solar Energy With Respect to Its Environmental and Economic Benefits
Paper Undergraduate
Plows, Plagues, and Petroleum: William
Plows, Plagues, and Petroleum: William F. Ruddiman's Evidence for Long-Term Anthropogenic Climate Change
Research Paper Undergraduate
Reasonable Solution to the Problem.
¶ … reasonable solution to the problem. Global warming is the gradual warming of the earth's climate, leading to changes in a wide variety of the earth's ecosystems. To solve global warming, we must reduce our…
Paper Undergraduate
Criminal justice enforcement of environmental laws
The Clean Air Act -- CAA received approval in the year 1970 and was subsequently amended in the year 1977 as well as 1990. The Act had been made to safeguard and increase the resources of the nation, with regard to air…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Deforestation causes and environmental impacts
Deforestation is occurring around the world today, and it is permanently killing forests and woodlands in many countries, but especially in the tropical areas of the world. Logging is a major contributor to…
Essay Undergraduate
Earthquake Response vs. Climate Change Risk Management
Risk Crisis Disaster Management Introduction Managing the problems related to global warming is quite different than responding to a damaging earthquake albeit both strategies require careful planning and coordination. This paper points to the contrasts between the two ways of management and response, and offers suggestions from the literature on pre-planning for both eventualities. Managing Strategies for Serious Earthquakes To say that a major earthquake that hits in an urban area is an acute crisis understates the problem, especially when an enormous amount of damage has been done. In Japan, one year after the calamity of a 9.0 earthquake and a devastating tsunami, some 300,000 people remain homeless and are living in temporary shelters. No amount of earthquake planning could have prepared Japanese officials for this kind of disaster. The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies reports that some 50,000 prefabricated homes have been built by the Japanese government, but "reconstruction of permanent houses has barely begun."