Tales from the Ice: Explaining Rapid Climate Change

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Original Publication Date:
2005-09-27
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Mon 6 Dec 2010 07.35 EST
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NASA | Earth Observatory (2005)
Tales from the Ice: Explaining Rapid Climate Change

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Start with the Introduction to the Feature Articles on NASA’s Earth Observatory web site to see how scientists explain rapid climate change. The beauty of Earth’s cities at night affirm our need for energy.

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Global Warming and rapid climate change? There is room for denial, ask anyone who has been given a terminal AIDS or cancer diagnosis. But we are one big family with too many secrets. The U.S. and other nations cannot continue to exempt the military from environmental standards.

Perhaps our accepted ideas about the origin of oil will change as we discover life at the Earth’s core and get more data from new missions beyond the Earth. What if we discover that the extraction methods and new technology that have given us hydraulic fracturing are destined to be obsolete? New research following in the footsteps of Thomas Gold’s out-of-the-box thinking may lead us down a very different energy path.

The oceans and atmosphere are partners in creating Earth’s climate. There is still much that remains to be discovered about the relationship between the geology underlying the oceans and Earth’s climate.

See: Ocean and Climate Change Institute : Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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The Education and Outreach Department is part of the United States Science Support Program (USSSP) for the International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) at the Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory.

The IODP Education Department’s mission is to raise awareness about ocean drilling science and its central role in our understanding of the Earth’s past, present and future, teach science content and process, and inspire careers in science, technology, engineering and math. Our approach includes use of authentic data, inquiry-centered activities and interdisciplinary explorations drawing from the adventures of the JOIDES Resolution ship and the earlier ocean drilling ship; the Glomar Challenger.

U.S. Science Support Program
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
61 Route 9W, Palisades, NY 10964

202.232.3900

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See: Public Supports Consumer and Environmental Protections, Polls Show

Exon, N. “Scientific drilling beneath the oceans solves earthly problems.” Australian Journal of Maritime and Ocean Affairs 2, no. 2 (2010): 37. (PDF)

Hayman, N. W, W. Bach, D. Blackman, G. L Christeson, K. Edwards, R. Haymon, B. Ildefonse, M. Schulte, D. Teagle, and S. White. “Future Scientific Drilling of Oceanic Crust.” Eos: Transactions of the American Geophysical Union 91, no. 15 (2010): 133–134.

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