Tag Archives: stratosphere

A burp and a hiccup; the volcanic contribution of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere

Facebooktwitterlinkedininstagram

Of the two certainties in life, volcanoes offer the most excitement (death and taxes are basically the same thing).  They are magnificent while asleep; a primeval ruggedness that stirs the imagination. We paint them, we eulogise them. And when they awaken, we run for cover. Whether in a state of dormancy or high agitation, they leave an impression on our inner and outer landscapes.

All active volcanoes emit gas; pre-, during and post-eruption. On average, 96% of volcanic gases are water vapour, the remaining components being CO2, SO2 (most common), plus a little helium, nitrogen, carbon monoxide, hydrogen sulphide, and a few halides. Volcano-derived carbon dioxide is frequently cited as a culprit for increasing atmospheric CO2 concentrations in Continue reading

Facebooktwitterlinkedininstagram
Facebooktwitterlinkedin

Ancient earth. 3 The air we breath; how our atmosphere evolved

Facebooktwitterlinkedininstagram

Our modern land sea and air. But what was it lie 4 billion years ago?

The really ancient earth: How our atmosphere evolved

Take a deep breath. Savour it.  One of the few absolutes of our physical world (that we probably haven’t looked after as well as we might have).  This post continues the theme “The Really Ancient Earth” by looking at what we know about the origin of our atmosphere; some of the evidence and some of the hypotheses.  What was it like on day 1 (about 4600 million years ago) and how did it evolved into our breath-taking world today? Continue reading

Facebooktwitterlinkedininstagram
Facebooktwitterlinkedin