• Home
©2023 - The Better Parent. All Right Reserved. Designed & Developed by Theory Solutions

Scientists trace atmospheric rise in CO2 during deglaciation to deep Pacific Ocean

by Staff August 13, 2018
August 13, 2018 806 views
806

How carbon made it out of the ocean and into the atmosphere has remained one of the most important mysteries of science. A new study, provides some of the most compelling evidence for how it happened — a ‘flushing’ of the deep Pacific Ocean caused by the acceleration of water circulation patterns that begin around Antarctica.

Source: sciencedaily.com

ScienceDaily
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
previous post
Parker Solar Probe Launches to ‘Touch the Sun’
next post
Blood test could detect kidney cancer up to 5 years earlier

Related Posts

Scientists develop 3D printing method that shows promise...

October 4, 2023

Tracking the bacteria behind life-threatening sepsis in premature...

October 4, 2023

Insect cyborgs: Towards precision movement

October 4, 2023

Hot weather hits productivity — even in air-conditioned...

October 4, 2023

Graphene oxide reduces the toxicity of Alzheimer’s proteins

October 4, 2023

Unique voice print in parrots

October 3, 2023

Trending

  • 3 Ways to Edit the boot/config.txt File on Raspberry Pi

    August 30, 2018
  • 6 Tools to Sync Microsoft Outlook With Google Calendar

    January 7, 2019
  • How to Vectorize an Image in Adobe Illustrator

    March 29, 2019
  • What Does This Emoji Mean? Emoji Face Meanings Explained

    May 24, 2019
  • The 8 Best DIY Security Camera Apps and Software for Linux

    May 31, 2019

©2023 - The Better Parent. All Right Reserved. Designed & Developed by Theory Solutions

Related Articlesx

Soft devices–powered by ‘stressed’ algae — glow...

‘Workhorse’ of photovoltaics in tandem with perovskite

When to break from the herd to...