The global carbon cycle and the role of the ocean
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概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
Only about half of all the CO_2 that has been produced by the burning of fossil fuels now remains in the atmosphere. The CO_2 "missing" from the atmosphere is the subject of an important debate. It was thought that the great majority of the missing CO_2 has invaded the ocean, for this system naturally acts as a giant chemical regulator of the atmosphere. Although it is clear that ocean processes have a major role in the regulation of the carbon dioxide content of the atmosphere through air-sea exchange processes, recent studies of the oceanic carbon cycle and air-sea interaction indicate that oceanic carbon is in a quasi-steady state via the system of biological and physical processes in the ocean interior. It is difficult to determine whether the ocean has the capacity to take up the increasing air-born CO_2 released by human activities over the past five or six decades. To understand this enigma, we need a better understanding of the natural variability of the oceanic carbon cycle.
- 静岡大学の論文
著者
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SUZUKI YOSHIMI
Institute of Geosciences, School of Science, Shizuoka University
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Suzuki Y
Shizuoka Univ. Jpn
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Suzuki Yoshimi
Institute Of Geosciences School Of Science Shizuoka University
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