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What A Week It Was: Apocadocuments from
View By Scenario:
Species Collapse:(6)
Plague/Virus:(4)
Climate Chaos:(10)
Resource Depletion: (2)
Biology Breach:(9)
Recovery:(8)
This Week's Top Ten Very Scary Tags:
overfishing  ~ stupid humans  ~ bad policy  ~ canary in coal mine  ~ ecosystem interrelationships  ~ coral bleaching  ~ governmental corruption  ~ endangered list  ~ people rise up  ~ alternative energy  ~ invasive species  



ApocaDocuments (39) gathered this week:
Sun, Jul 13, 2008
from Massachusetts Institute of Technology via ScienceDaily:
New 'Window' Opens On Solar Energy: Cost Effective Devices Available Soon
"Imagine windows that not only provide a clear view and illuminate rooms, but also use sunlight to efficiently help power the building they are part of. MIT engineers report a new approach to harnessing the sun's energy that could allow just that." ...


"Available soon"? I want this now!

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Sun, Jul 13, 2008
from Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel:
Hazardous flame retardant found in household objects
"A flame retardant that was taken out of children's pajamas more than 30 years ago after it was found to cause cancer is being used with increasing regularity in furniture, paint -- even baby carriers and bassinets -- and manufacturers are under no obligation to let the public know about it... [The EPA] Web site lists 16 studies that each conclude the chemical does not harm people. The Journal Sentinel examined those studies and found that all were funded by chemical-makers..." ...


Makes ya wonder: whose environment is the EPA protecting?

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Sun, Jul 13, 2008
from Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
CDC lab containing deadly virus suffers power outage
A laboratory building that contains a deadly strain of avian flu and other germs is among four that lost power for more than an hour Friday when a backup generator system failed again at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.... CDC officials did not attempt to override and restart the agency's backup generators because they didn't know what the anomaly was that shut them down, Skinner said. ...


Hot 'Lanta!

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Sun, Jul 13, 2008
from The Independent (UK):
Sewage threatens to turn flamingo breeding site into cesspool
In one of the world's great wildlife spectacles, tens of thousands of lesser flamingos gather at a South African wetland –- but it is a spectacle now gravely threatened by pollution.... The dam is being used to dump raw sewage from a malfunctioning treatment plant owned by the Sol Plaatje Municipality. "Without urgent action, the dam will become a polluted cesspool devoid of birdlife," said Duncan Pritchard, of BirdLife South Africa. ...


We're so tired of this.
Now it's flamingos in the coal mine.

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Sun, Jul 13, 2008
from The Independent (UK):
We've seen the future ... and we may NOT be doomed
Humanity stands on the threshold of a peaceful and prosperous future, with an unprecedented ability to extend lifespans and increase the power of ordinary people – but is likely to blow it through inequality, violence and environmental degradation. And governments are not equipped to ensure that the opportunities are seized and disasters averted.... [T]he 2008 State of the Future report runs to 6,300 pages and draws on contributions from 2,500 experts around the globe. Its warning is all the more stark for eschewing doom and gloom. "The future continues to get better for most of the world," it concludes, "but a series of tipping points could drastically alter global prospects." ...


If governments can't do it, who can?
Oh yeah, us.

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Sun, Jul 13, 2008
from The Independent (UK):
Return of the ivory trade
The world trade in ivory, banned 19 years ago to save the African elephant from extinction, is about to take off again, with the emergence of China as a major ivory buyer. Alarmed conservationists are warning of a new wave of elephant killing across both Africa and Asia if China is allowed to become a legal importer, as looks likely at a meeting in Geneva next week. ... "This is going to mean a return to the bad old days where elephants are being shot into extinction," said Allan Thornton, of the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA), the group which provided much of the evidence on which the original ivory ban was based in 1989. ...


Like the elephants, we will never forget.

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Sun, Jul 13, 2008
from University of Alabama-Birmingham:
Good News about Four-dollar Gas? Fewer Traffic Deaths
An analysis of yearly vehicle deaths compared to gas prices found death rates drop significantly as people slow down and drive less. If gas remains at $4 a gallon or higher for a year or more, traffic deaths could drop by more than 1,000 per month nationwide, said Michael Morrisey, Ph.D., director of UAB's Lister Hill Center for Health Policy and a co-author on the new findings.... "For every 10 percent rise in gas prices, fatalities are reduced by 2.3 percent. The effects are even more dramatic for teen drivers." ...


Just imagine the savings
we'll see in the future!

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Sat, Jul 12, 2008
from National Geographic News:
Yellowstone Geysers May Stop Erupting, Study Suggests
"A long-term study of Yellowstone National Park's iconic geysers suggests that dry spells caused by climate change are slowing—and may even stop—the geysers' clockwork-regular eruptions." ...


If this doesn't ignite action to fight climate change, what will?

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Sat, Jul 12, 2008
from The Telegraph via Associated Press:
Study: Southeast's cheap access to water at risk
"A new study says global warming and population growth threaten the Southeast's already precarious water supplies by fueling more extreme weather and degrading water quality... Models show that anticipated higher temperatures will generate more volatile weather, with more extreme storms, flooding and erosion ... and contribute to more severe droughts. Adding to the strain is the Southeast's population growth, which has led the nation in recent years." ...


Can't we just get all those extra people to help fight the weather?

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Sat, Jul 12, 2008
from National Research Council:
Restoration of Climate Sensors Needed
To continue the study of long-term climate change, NASA and NOAA need to restore a number of sensors that were previously planned for future Earth-observing satellites but cancelled [by the Bush Administration], according to a new report from the National Research Council. The report provides recommendations for a recovery strategy and stresses the need for a clearer national policy toward acquiring long-term climate records. ...


Without the satellites' information,
we won't have to worry nearly so much.

ApocaDoc
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Sat, Jul 12, 2008
from Daily Mail:
Superbugs threaten to put Britain back to pre-antibiotic age
"Superbugs are threatening to return Britain to a 'pre-antibiotic' era in which common infections killed in huge numbers, a major new study warns. There is an urgent need for new, effective medicines to replace drugs that have become useless, says the report by the Royal Society, the UK's science academy. The battle against drug-resistant bacteria has concentrated too much on tackling dirty hospitals and curbing the over-use of existing antibiotics." ...


This is a job for ... superdrugs!

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Sat, Jul 12, 2008
from KOMO News:
Increasingly popular caviar raises health concerns
"...As demand for paddlefish caviar has grown, health officials have become as uneasy ... about a variety of toxins found in the eggs, including mercury, chlordane and cancer-causing polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs. But advocates say the level of contaminants is below federal safety standards and that most consumers don't eat enough of it to suffer any ill effects... Washington chef and restaurant owner Nora Pouillon said she doesn't serve paddlefish caviar. "I can't with a clear conscience poison my customers," she said. ...


Boy, let's just hope all chefs feel like that.

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Sat, Jul 12, 2008
from BBC:
Leak closes French nuclear plant
"France's nuclear safety watchdog has ordered a plant in the country's south to temporarily close after a uranium leak polluted the local water supply... Waste containing unenriched uranium leaked into two rivers at the Tricastin plant at Bollene, 40km (25 miles) from the popular tourist city of Avignon." ...


If only the uranium had been enriched!

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Want more context?
Try reading our book FREE online:
Humoring the Horror of the Converging Emergencies!
More fun than a barrel of jellyfish!
Sat, Jul 12, 2008
from BBC:
Living in a world without waste
"The Mayor of Kamikatsu, a small community in the hills of eastern Japan, has urged politicians around the world to follow his lead and make their towns "Zero Waste"... Kamikatsu may be a backwater in the wooded hills and rice terraces of south-eastern Japan but it's become a world leader on waste policy. There are no waste collections from households at all. People have to take full responsibility for everything they throw away. ...


I see trees of green... red roses too... folks take care of their waste... how 'bout you?...And I think to myself... what a wonderful world...

ApocaDoc
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Fri, Jul 11, 2008
from The Japan Times:
Musky hormone disrupter residue found in breast milk
"A minute residue of synthetic musk fragrances, feared to block hormones, has been found in a limited number of sampled breast milk and fat tissues of Japanese women, according to a recent joint study by researchers from three Japanese universities. While there have been findings of the synthetic compounds -- known as HHCB and AHTN -- in breast milk in the United States and Europe, this was the first study that reported their detection in people in Japan." ...


"Musky hormone disrupter residue" ... actually, that sounds kind of tasty!

ApocaDoc
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Fri, Jul 11, 2008
from Science:
Warming Spells Trouble for Fish
"Global warming of the oceans will likely cause the extinction by 2050 of dozens of fish species that cannot migrate to colder waters, according to a study presented here yesterday at the 11th International Coral Reef Symposium. "The loss of biodiversity will be considerable, and replacing them with new species would take millions of years," says co-author Daniel Pauly of the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Vancouver, Canada." ...


I know! Let's break off even more of the Antarctic ice shelf to cool the waters of the ocean.

ApocaDoc
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Fri, Jul 11, 2008
from New Scientist:
Corals join frogs and toads as world's most endangered
"Within one generation, diving on coral reefs could be a very rare holiday opportunity. The first comprehensive review of tropical coral species reveals that over one-quarter reef-building coral species already face extinction. This means corals join frogs and toads as the most threatened group of animal species on the planet." ...


Can't you just see their little tentacles reaching up, pleading for our help?

ApocaDoc
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Fri, Jul 11, 2008
from Washington Post:
EPA Won't Act on Emissions This Year
"The Bush administration has decided not to take any new steps to regulate greenhouse gas emissions before the president leaves office, despite pressure from the Supreme Court and broad accord among senior federal officials that new regulation is appropriate now." ...


Oh well. We've gone this long, why not wait some more?

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Jul 10, 2008
from Associated Press:
Antarctic ice shelf 'hanging by thread': European scientists
"New evidence has emerged that a large plate of floating ice shelf attached to Antarctica is breaking up, in a troubling sign of global warming, the European Space Agency (ESA) said on Thursday. Images taken by its Envisat remote-sensing satellite show that Wilkins Ice Shelf is "hanging by its last thread" to Charcot Island, one of the plate's key anchors to the Antarctic peninsula, ESA said in a press release. ...


I don't suppose duct tape would be any help, would it?

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Jul 10, 2008
from San Francisco Chronicle:
U.S. proposes to put smelt on endangered list
"The delta smelt, a tiny but important fish in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, could officially become "endangered" under a proposal announced Wednesday by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Smelt are an indicator of the delta's health, and nearly 750,000 acres of farmland and 25 million people from the Bay Area to Central and Southern California rely on water from the delta." ...


Our new canary in the coal mine: the smelt in the delta!

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Jul 10, 2008
from Forbes:
Dirty Driving: Top 10 Worst Polluters
"The Hummer H2 might be an obvious target for environmentalists, but unless it's caked in mud, the hulking sport utility vehicle isn't the filthiest ride on the road. That distinction goes to another SUV: the Volkswagen Touareg V10 TDI." ...


Those nomadic Berber tribesmen of the disputed Western Sahara -- AKA the Touareg -- must be experiencing a good deal of shame right now.

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Jul 10, 2008
from London Independent:
How to cut your paper footprint
"Each of us throws away, on average, a quarter of a ton of paper every year... No one likes to think of trees being felled, but many of us have a cosy image in our heads that it all comes from recycling or "sustainable" woodlands growing in neat rows, perhaps somewhere in Sweden. It's a myth. Globally, 70 per cent of the 335 million tons of paper the world uses each year comes from natural, un-farmed sources." ...


Please think before printing this story.

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Jul 10, 2008
from New York Times:
Global Warming Talks Leave Few Concrete Goals
"The statement issued by the industrialized Group of 8 pledged to "move toward a carbon-free society" by seeking to cut worldwide emissions of heat-trapping gases in half by 2050. But the statement did not say whether that baseline would be emissions at 1990 levels, or the less ambitious baseline of current levels, already 25 percent higher. Mentions of mandatory restrictions on emissions were carefully framed. Caps or taxes were endorsed where "national circumstances" made those acceptable. The statement urged nations to set "midterm, aspirational goals for energy efficiency." ...


Makes you wonder if the right people are in charge.

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Wed, Jul 9, 2008
from New Scientist, via EurekAlert:
10 people die from new CJD-like disease
A new form of fatal dementia has been discovered in 16 Americans, 10 of whom have already died of the condition. It resembles Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease -- with patients gradually losing their ability to think, speak and move -- but has features that make it distinct from known forms of CJD. ...


Those symptoms sound a lot like
watching television.

ApocaDoc
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Wed, Jul 9, 2008
from NOAA, via EurekAlert:
Aerosol toxins from red tides may cause long-term health threat
NOAA scientists reported in the current issue of the journal Environmental Health Perspectives that an algal toxin commonly inhaled in sea spray, attacks and damages DNA in the lungs of laboratory rats.... The scientists, led by John Ramsdell of NOAA's Center for Environmental Health and Biomolecular Research in Charleston, S.C., determined that brevetoxins react with DNA of lung tissue and attach to the DNA-bases that code genetic information. The linkage of chemicals in the environment to DNA is a first step for many cancer causing agents and can lead to mutations in genes that normally prevent the formation of cancers. ...


Aaaah. Get a whiff of that salt air!

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Wed, Jul 9, 2008
from Guardian (UK):
More pressure on global fish stocks as scientists warn of underreporting of catches
The implication is that global fish stocks, already widely acknowledged to be under heavy pressure, are in far more in danger than thought. The underreporting particularly threatens the hundreds of millions of poor people around the world who rely on fish for subsistence. A reconstruction of actual catches in 20 places around the globe showed that fish landings that were not reported were at least as high as the declared catch, and sometimes more than 16 times higher. "This is underreporting of such magnitude that it boggles the mind," said Professor Daniel Pauly, of the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. ...


Didn't Enron use that kind of accounting?

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You're still reading! Good for you!
You really should read our short, funny, frightening book FREE online (or buy a print copy):
Humoring the Horror of the Converging Emergencies!
We've been quipping this stuff for more than 30 months! Every day!
Which might explain why we don't get invited to parties anymore.
Wed, Jul 9, 2008
from Nature, via EurekAlert:
Scripps research scientists reveal key structure from ebola virus
the research reveals the shape of the Ebola virus spike protein, which is necessary for viral entry into human cells, bound to an immune system antibody acting to neutralize the virus.... "Much about Ebola virus is still a mystery," says Erica Ollmann Saphire, the Scripps Research scientist who led the five-year effort. "However, this structure now reveals how this critical piece of the virus is assembled and, importantly, identifies vulnerable sites that we can exploit." ...


Hooray, I think.

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Wed, Jul 9, 2008
from New York Times:
Corals, Already in Danger, Are Facing New Threat From Farmed Algae
Corals are being covered and smothered to death by a bushy seaweed that is so tough even algae-grazing fish avoid it. It settles in the reef's crevices that fish once called home, driving them away.... [I]ntroduced in the past three decades to 20 countries around the world from Tonga to Zanzibar and the result in most of them has been failure or worse. The alga K. alvarezii invaded the Gulf of Mannar Biosphere Reserve in south India a decade after commercial cultivation began in nearby Panban. "No part of the coral reef was visible in most of the invaded sites, where it doomed entire colonies," the journal Current Science has reported. ...


Could be called the
kudzu of the sea.

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Wed, Jul 9, 2008
from Guardian (UK):
GM installs world's biggest rooftop solar panels
The largest rooftop solar power station in the world is being built in Spain. With a capacity of 12 megawatts of power, the station is made up of 85,000 lightweight panels covering an area of two million square feet. Manufactured in rolls, rather like carpet, the photovoltaic panels are to be installed on the roof of a General Motors car factory in Zaragoza, eastern Spain. ...


On top of a car factory?
Those witty Spaniards!

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Wed, Jul 9, 2008
from University of Michigan, via EurekAlert:
How intense will storms get? New model helps answer question
A new mathematical model indicates that dust devils, water spouts, tornadoes, hurricanes and cyclones are all born of the same mechanism and will intensify as climate change warms the Earth's surface.... For every 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit that the Earth's surface temperature warms, the intensity of storms could increase by at least a few percent, the scientists say. For an intense storm, that could translate into a 10 percent increase in destructive power. ...


How might that affect our wind farms?

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Tue, Jul 8, 2008
from Rutgers University via ScienceDaily:
Could Pond Scum Undo Pollution, Fight Global Warming And Alleviate World Hunger?
"Three plant biologists at Rutgers' Waksman Institute of Microbiology are obsessed with duckweed, a tiny aquatic plant with an unassuming name. Now they have convinced the federal government to focus its attention on duckweed's tremendous potential for cleaning up pollution, combating global warming and feeding the world." ...


Plus, it's fun to say ... go ahead, say it... duckweed.

ApocaDoc
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Tue, Jul 8, 2008
from Los Angeles Times:
A climate threat from flat TVs, microchips
"A synthetic chemical widely used in the manufacture of computers and flat-screen televisions is a potent greenhouse gas, with 17,000 times the global warming effect of carbon dioxide, but its measure in the atmosphere has never been taken, nor is it regulated by international treaty." ...


The Apocalypse will be televised.

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Tue, Jul 8, 2008
from NewsWireless.net:
Nokia offers 'amnesty' for old phones: 'We'll recycle them for you'
"If all of the three billion people that own mobile phones globally brought back just one unused device, we could save 240,000 tonnes of raw materials and reduce greenhouse gases to the same effect as taking four million cars off the road."... "From today, anyone can come along to our London store and hand in their old handsets, whatever the make, and we’ll recycle it for them." ...


Now, if only Intel would do the same
with old PCs...

ApocaDoc
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Tue, Jul 8, 2008
from AP News:
Cheney wanted cuts in climate testimony
Vice President Dick Cheney's office pushed for major deletions in congressional testimony on the public health consequences of climate change, fearing the presentation by a leading health official might make it harder to avoid regulating greenhouse gases, a former EPA officials maintains. When six pages were cut from testimony on climate change and public health by the head of the Centers for Disease Control last October, the White House insisted the changes were made because of reservations raised by White House advisers about the accuracy of the science. But Jason K. Burnett, until last month the senior adviser on climate change to Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Stephen Johnson, says that Cheney's office was deeply involved in getting nearly half of the CDC's original draft testimony removed. ...


Why listen to experts?
They just say scary things.

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Mon, Jul 7, 2008
from Terra Daily:
Australian climate report like 'disaster novel': minister
"Heatwaves, less rain and increased drought are the likely prospect for Australia, according to a new report on climate change which the agriculture minister said read like a "disaster novel". The report, by the Bureau of Meteorology and the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, found that the world's driest inhabited continent is likely to suffer more extreme temperatures due to climate change." ...


At least he didn't say
it was like a "disaster movie."

ApocaDoc
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Mon, Jul 7, 2008
from USA Today:
'Invasive' humans threaten U.S. coral reefs
"Half of all U.S. coral reefs, the center of marine life in the Pacific and Caribbean oceans, are either in poor or fair condition, a federal agency warns today. The report by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration places much of the blame on human activities and warns of further oceanwide decline. Reefs closer to cities were found to suffer poorer health, damaged by trash, overfishing and pollution." ...


Those pesky humans.
Can't live with 'em; can't live without 'em!

ApocaDoc
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Mon, Jul 7, 2008
from NineMSN (Australia):
Yarra River fish deaths worry protesters
The dredging of millions of tonnes of toxic sludge from Melbourne's Yarra River should stop until an investigation determines why fish are dying, protesters say.... "We're talking about exactly the same area and this is where they're dredging up that black toxic stuff which is full of heavy metals and who knows what else".... Almost three million cubic metres of toxic silt is being dredged from the Yarra River area and deposited in a containment "bund" in Port Phillip Bay as part of a $1 billion project to make way for larger ships. ...


Can't stop the march of progress, can we?

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Mon, Jul 7, 2008
from University of Exeter, via EurekAlert:
Study shows rise in Cornwall's dolphin, whale and porpoise deaths
The research team analysed records of cetacean strandings from 1911 to 2006 from around Cornwall's north and south coasts and the Isles of Scilly. They found a marked increase from the early 1980s, with common dolphins and harbour porpoises being the worst-affected species. In total, fewer than 50 cetacean strandings a year occurred in Cornwall in the 1980s but numbers since 2000 have ranged from 100 to 250 per annum.... The researchers analysed records of 2,257 cetaceans, 862 of which were common dolphins. They found that, since 1990, at least 61 percent of incidents in Cornwall are the result of fishing activity, with animals being caught up in nets in a phenomenon known as 'bycatch'. The seas around Cornwall are known to be a major hotspot for large scale fisheries, with many vessels coming from other EU nations. ...


I thought that was called
collateral damage.

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Mon, Jul 7, 2008
from Science, via Science Daily:
Acidifying Oceans Add Urgency To Carbon Dioxide Cuts
[H]uman emissions of carbon dioxide have begun to alter the chemistry of the ocean--often called the cradle of life on Earth. The ecological and economic consequences are difficult to predict but possibly calamitous, warn a team of chemical oceanographers in the July 4 issue of Science, and halting the changes already underway will likely require even steeper cuts in carbon emissions than those currently proposed to curb climate change.... Although the ocean's chemical response to higher carbon dioxide levels is relatively predictable, the biological response is more uncertain. The ocean's pH and carbonate chemistry has been remarkably stable for millions of years--much more stable than temperature. ...


We're in for an ocean of troubles.

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