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Greenhouse gases

Holt Earth Science Chapter 17, Section 17.2

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Composition of the Atmosphere Air is a mixture of many discrete gases with their own physical properties in which different quantities of tiny solid/liquid particles are suspended. A. Major Components Composition of air varies depending on the time and place. If H20 Vapor, dust, and other variables were removed from the atmosphere, the makeup is very stable worldwide for an altitude of ~ 80 km. Ni and O2 make up 99% of clean, dry air. They are the most plentiful components, and important to life, but do not affect weather much. The remaining 1% is mostly Argon (0.93%) and other tiny quantities of many other gases. B. Carbon Dioxide (CO2)

Campbell Biology 9th Edition - Ch. 56 Conservation

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Chapter 56: Conservation Biology and Global Change Biodiversity Conservation biology is a goal-oriented science that seeks to counter the biodiversity crisis, the current rapid decrease in Earth?s variety of life. Extinction is a natural phenomenon that has been occurring since life evolved on earth. The current rate of extinction is what underlies the biodiversity crisis. A high rate of species extinction is being caused by humans. The three levels of biodiversity: genetic diversity species diversity ecosystem diversity The four major threats to biodiversity: Habitat loss Human alteration of habitat is the single greatest threat to biodiversity Introduced species: invasive/nonnative/exotic species Overexploitation: harvest wild plants/animals

Chemical Symbols to Know

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Chemical Symbols to Know SO2- Sulfur Dioxide (burning coal) NO- Nitric Oxide NH3- Ammonia H2O2- Hydrogen Peroxide H2SO4- Sulfuric Acid NO2- Nitrogen Dioxide CO2- Carbon Dioxide (#1 greenhouse gas) CO- Carbon Monoxide HNO3- Nitric Acid N2O- Nitrous Oxide O3- Ozone (NH4)SO4- Ammonium Sulfate SO3- Sulfur Trioxide CFCs- Chloroflorocarbons CH4- Methane (greenhouse gas)
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