1
Learn about environmental issues, their effect on your community and actions for your involvement. Reconnect with your environment SP19371 Check out these websites to learn more: www.climate.gov/#education www.seagrant.psu.edu/extension/ climatechange.htm www.sos.noaa.gov/datasets/ Atmosphere/ Find articles about energy in your region. Which type of fossil fuel is used to create the energy? Are there any instances of sustainable and renewable energy sources? Share your thoughts about the use of fossil fuels and why and if they should be replaced. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO Earth Action Erie and the PA Department of Environmental Protection recently hosted a sustainable energy Youth Training Day at the Tom Ridge Environmental Center. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO/Wikimedia Commons In a short period of time, humans have added significant amounts of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels. Coal, oil and natural gas currently provide more than 85 percent of all the energy consumed in the United States, nearly two-thirds of our electricity, and virtually all of our transportation fuels. Long winter evenings became a little less cold and dark when humans realized burning wood could provide heat and light when the sun went down. What they didn’t understand is the critical role carbon played in their life cycle, or carbon’s move- ment from the burning wood back into the natural environment. Yet even today with all our sci- entific knowledge of the carbon cycle, many people still don’t un- derstand this important element and the balancing act that makes life on earth possible. Since the Industrial Revolu- tion, humans have significantly altered this important balance. An escalating population has caused the largest disturbance to the global carbon cycle because of ongoing large-scale use of fossil fuels to meet increasing energy demands. Great quantities of carbon are found in the earth’s crust, its sur- face waters, the atmosphere, and in green plants. Carbon is one of the four most abundant chemical elements in the universe. Along with hydrogen and oxy- gen, it is an essential building block for all living organisms. It is the foundation of carbohydrates, proteins, lipids and nucleic ac- ids or DNA. And when carbon is combined with oxygen, it forms an insulating blanket of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere that makes the earth livable. The total amount of carbon on earth always remains the same but there is a constant exchange of carbon between this biotic (living) and abiotic (nonliving) world. This carbon cycle plays an important role in maintaining proper levels of CO2 in the earth’s atmosphere. Carbon is regularly exchanged between the atmosphere, land, water and living beings. A car- bon atom in your body may have been part of an extinct dinosaur at one time. Since that dinosaur died and decomposed, its carbon atoms may have been recycled many times in plants, trees, or floated free in the air as carbon dioxide. Those same atoms could also have been locked away in the shell of sea creatures that are buried at the ocean bottom or even be part of a recent volcanic eruption. And some was likely turned into fossil fuel. Oceans and growing plants are considered carbon sinks because they absorb more carbon dioxide than they emit. A carbon source, on the other hand, is any place or process that releases carbon di- oxide into the atmosphere, such as the decay of dead plants and animals. Because natural carbon sourc- es and natural carbon sinks ex- perience a natural equilibrium, carbon dioxide levels in the at- mosphere have shown very little change during the last 10,000 years, until human activities up- set that balance. Activities such rapid indus- trialization and deforestation along with explosive population growth and our dependence on burning fossil fuels for energy have increased the levels of CO2 at a very rapid rate. The current level of atmospheric CO2 is more than 35 percent greater than its highest level over at least 800,000 years. This measured increase since the Industrial Revolution can- not be accounted for by other sources, such as volcanoes or forest fires. There is, however, a close correlation between fossil fuel use, population growth and atmospheric carbon dioxide con- centration. Thesehumanemissionsarenot counterbalanced by CO2 absorp- tion in the natural cycle. There- fore, these emissions exceed the ability of carbon sinks to absorb the excess we are adding to the system. In coming weeks, we’ll examine the evidence of human-induced CO2 production and its effect on the planet. To extend today’s learning, teachers can find lessons at www. goerie.com/nie. ANNA MCCARTNEY, a communications and education specialist for Pennsylvania Sea Grant, can be reached by e-mail at [email protected]. Losing our equilibrium Why ‘carbon sinks’ are out of sync By ANNA MCCARTNEY Contributing writer Carbon is constantly on the move! Scientists collect data to track this movement and to measure the atmospheric con- centrations of CO2 to understand the natural carbon cycle and the effect caused by human contri- butions. With knowledge come solutions that can lessen global catastrophes caused by a rapid rise in average global tempera- tures. Carbon moves this way: From the atmosphere to plants. Green plants constantly re- move CO2 from the atmosphere through photosynthesis (the pro- cess whereby plants make food in the presence of sunlight and water). Certain bacteria also use CO2 to synthesize the organic compounds they need. From plants to animals. Car- bon present in the food made by green plants reaches animals through the food chain. Carnivo- rous animals receive this carbon when they eat other animals. From the atmosphere to water bodies. Carbon dioxide is con- tinuously dissolved in the seas and oceans through the process of diffusion. This dissolved CO2 may remain as it is in the marine waters, may be used by marine plants for photosynthesis or may get converted into carbonates and bicarbonates, which are converted into calcium carbon- ate by certain marine organisms such as corals and oysters to make their shells. When these organisms die, their shells de- posit on the sea floor and finally turn into sedimentary rocks. From living things to the land. As plants and animals die, carbon is deposited in the ground. Some of these dead organisms get buried under the ground, and after mil- lions of years, change into fossil fuels due to high pressure and other physical and chemical changes. From living things to the atmo- sphere. Carbon dioxide is regu- larly returned to the atmosphere by the process of respiration in plants and animals. Other natu- ral sources of CO2 are forest fires and volcanoes. From fossil fuels to the atmo- sphere. When humans remove fossil fuels (coal, oil and gas) from below the ground surface, they reintroduce carbon that has been out of circulation for millions of years to the global carbon cycle. Burning fossil fu- els releases this stored carbon, converting it to CO2, which then enters and builds up in the atmo- sphere. ANNA MCCARTNEY, a communications and education specialist for Pennsylvania Sea Grant, can be reached by e-mail at [email protected]. Follow carbon’s natural global cycle By ANNA MCCARTNEY Contributing writer This page brought to you by: CONTRIBUTED PHOTO The 2010 local Envirothon winners, team Green Flash from North East High School, placed third in state competition. The Erie County Conservation District is looking for new and returning high school students and their advisers to participate in the 2011 Envirothon. This exciting competition was created in 1979 by Pennsylvania’s Soil and Water Conservation dis- tricts to inspire young adults to conserve ecosystems and intro- duce them to natural science career options. It quickly gained national popularity as a hands-on outdoor contest that challenges high school students in the field of environmental science. Since its creation, more than 500,000 students across the United States and Canada have had the chance to shine in the five testing categories of soils/land use, aquat- ic ecology, forestry, wildlife and current environmental issues. Each team consists of three to five high school students and an adviser. During the competition, the team members work together to answer basic questions in each category. There is no cost to regis- ter or participate; the Conserva- tion District covers all costs for the regional competition. But advisers must create a team and contact Kristen Currier, the Envi- rothon coordinator, for the com- petition informational packet by Feb 1. The 2011 Erie County Enviro- thon is scheduled for May 5 at the Erie County Conservation District’s Headwaters Park. The local winning team will advance to the state level. The state win- ner then advances to the national competition. For more information about this opportunity contact Currier at kcurrier@erieconservation. com or call 825-6403. Teens can compete in 2011 Envirothon By ANNA MCCARTNEY Contributing writer CONTRIBUTED PHOTO/Department of Energy The carbon atom, an essential building block of all living organisms, constantly moves through all living things, and through the oceans, atmosphere, and earth’s crust. The natural carbon cycle experiences a natural equilibrium but emissions created from burning fossil fuels that have been underground for millions of years are not absorbed in the natural cycle, so it builds up in the system. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO/NOAA There is a close correlation between population growth, fossil fuel use and increased atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration. Alternative sustainable energy solutions could ease problems at- tributed to burning fossil fuels. More than 140 students who attended the Erie Earth Action Youth training day at the Tom Ridge Environmental Center learned about choices that could replace or eliminate the need for fossil fuels, including wind, solar, geothermal, biofuels and green technology. “When the wind blows, any- thing connected to the wind- mill will get the wind power. We made music with power from our windmill,” said Orion McConnell from the Perseus House Charter School of Excellence Maritime Center. Fort LeBoeuf student Caitlynn Orr was also impressed with the wind power. “There is a guy that makes windmills out of old wheel- chair motors, which is awesome,” she said. Brent Hartsting from the Per- seus House Charter School of Excellence liked building the windmills because he likes elec- tronics. “It would be a good job,” he added. Joanna Connell student Tyler Vaughn said: “Solar (energy) can power America. You can even get solar cell-phone chargers.” Teachers and students in grades four to eight explored sus- tainable energy sources and tech- nologies with local experts from Hero BX, the local biofuels plant, and from Solar Revolution, North Coast Energy Systems, Gannon University, Mercyhurst College and Renewergy. Educators from the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources also led some of the workshops for students. ANNA MCCARTNEY, a communications and education specialist for Pennsylvania Sea Grant, can be reached by e-mail at [email protected]. Alternative energy day fires up Erie students By ANNA MCCARTNEY Contributing writer What: Special showing of action film, “Wintervention” by Warren Miller. Where: Tom Ridge Environmental Center, Big Green ScreenTheater When: Friday and Saturday at 7 p.m. Cost: Advance tickets are $10 or $15 at the door.Tickets are available at Peek’n Peak Ski Resort,Tom Ridge Environmental Center Big Green Screen Theater, Erie Sport Store Peach Street location, Elements Board Shop and Erie Ski Club or by contacting the Big Green Screen at 838-4123 or Scott Cable at 873-3071 or [email protected]. LEARN MORE Tuesday, January 4, 2011 | Erie Times-News | GoErie.com | 3D

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Page 1: Losing our equilibrium · 2017-06-29 · world. This carbon cycle plays animportantroleinmaintaining properlevelsofCO2intheearth’s atmosphere. Carbonisregularlyexchanged between

Learn about environmental issues, their effect on your community and actions for your involvement.

Reconnect with your environmentSP19371

Check out these websitesto learn more:

www.climate.gov/#educationwww.seagrant.psu.edu/extension/

climatechange.htmwww.sos.noaa.gov/datasets/

Atmosphere/

Find articles about energyin your region. Which typeof fossil fuel is used tocreate the energy?Are there anyinstances ofsustainable andrenewable energysources? Share yourthoughts about theuse of fossil fuels andwhy and if they shouldbe replaced.

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

Earth Action Erie and the PA Department of Environmental Protectionrecently hosted a sustainable energy Youth Training Day at the TomRidge Environmental Center.

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO/Wikimedia Commons

In a short period of time, humans have added significant amounts of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels. Coal, oil andnatural gas currently provide more than 85 percent of all the energy consumed in the United States, nearly two-thirds of our electricity, andvirtually all of our transportation fuels.

Long winter evenings becamea little less cold and dark whenhumans realized burning woodcould provide heat and lightwhen the sun went down.

Whattheydidn’tunderstandisthecriticalrolecarbonplayedintheirlifecycle,orcarbon’smove-mentfromtheburningwoodbackinto the natural environment.

Yet even today with all our sci-entific knowledge of the carboncycle, many people still don’t un-derstand this important elementandthebalancingactthatmakeslife on earth possible.

Since the Industrial Revolu-tion, humans have significantlyaltered this important balance.An escalating population hascausedthelargestdisturbancetothe global carbon cycle becauseofongoinglarge-scaleuseoffossilfuels to meet increasing energydemands.

Great quantities of carbon arefound in the earth’s crust, its sur-facewaters,theatmosphere,andin green plants. Carbon is one ofthefourmostabundantchemicalelements in the universe.

Along with hydrogen and oxy-gen, it is an essential buildingblockforalllivingorganisms.Itisthefoundationofcarbohydrates,proteins, lipids and nucleic ac-ids or DNA. And when carbon iscombined with oxygen, it formsan insulating blanket of carbondioxide in the atmosphere thatmakes the earth livable.

The total amount of carbon onearth always remains the samebut there is a constant exchangeof carbon between this biotic(living) and abiotic (nonliving)world. This carbon cycle playsanimportantroleinmaintainingproperlevelsofCO2intheearth’satmosphere.

Carbonisregularlyexchangedbetween the atmosphere, land,water and living beings. A car-bon atom in your body may havebeen part of an extinct dinosaurat one time. Since that dinosaur

diedanddecomposed,itscarbonatoms may have been recycledmany times in plants, trees, orfloated free in the air as carbondioxide.Thosesameatomscouldalsohavebeenlockedawayintheshell of sea creatures that areburied at the ocean bottom oreven be part of a recent volcaniceruption. And some was likelyturned into fossil fuel.

Oceansandgrowingplantsareconsideredcarbonsinksbecausetheyabsorbmorecarbondioxidethan they emit. A carbon source,ontheotherhand,isanyplaceorprocess that releases carbon di-oxide into the atmosphere, suchas the decay of dead plants andanimals.

Becausenaturalcarbonsourc-es and natural carbon sinks ex-perience a natural equilibrium,carbon dioxide levels in the at-mosphere have shown very little

change during the last 10,000years, until human activities up-set that balance.

Activities such rapid indus-trialization and deforestationalong with explosive populationgrowth and our dependence onburning fossil fuels for energyhave increased the levels of CO2at a very rapid rate. The currentlevelofatmosphericCO2ismorethan 35 percent greater than itshighest leveloverat least800,000years.

This measured increase sincethe Industrial Revolution can-not be accounted for by othersources, such as volcanoes orforest fires. There is, however, aclose correlation between fossilfuel use, population growth andatmosphericcarbondioxidecon-centration.

ThesehumanemissionsarenotcounterbalancedbyCO2absorp-tion in the natural cycle. There-fore, these emissions exceed theability of carbon sinks to absorbthe excess we are adding to thesystem.

Incomingweeks,we’llexaminethe evidence of human-inducedCO2 production and its effect onthe planet.

To extend today’s learning,teacherscanfindlessonsatwww.goerie.com/nie.

A N N A M C C A R T N E Y, acommunications and educationspecialist for Pennsylvania SeaGrant, can be reached by e-mail [email protected].

Losing our equilibriumWhy ‘carbonsinks’ areout of syncBy ANNA MCCARTNEYContributing writer

Carbon is constantly on themove! Scientists collect datato track this movement and tomeasure the atmospheric con-centrationsofCO2tounderstandthenaturalcarboncycleandtheeffect caused by human contri-butions. With knowledge comesolutions that can lessen globalcatastrophes caused by a rapidrise in average global tempera-tures.

Carbon moves this way:▀From the atmosphere to plants.

Green plants constantly re-move CO2 from the atmospherethroughphotosynthesis (thepro-cess whereby plants make foodin the presence of sunlight andwater).CertainbacteriaalsouseCO2 to synthesize the organiccompounds they need.▀From plants to animals. Car-

bon present in the food made bygreen plants reaches animalsthrough the food chain. Carnivo-rousanimalsreceivethiscarbonwhen they eat other animals.▀From the atmosphere to water

bodies. Carbon dioxide is con-tinuously dissolved in the seasand oceans through the process

of diffusion. This dissolved CO2mayremainasit is inthemarinewaters, may be used by marineplantsforphotosynthesisormayget converted into carbonatesand bicarbonates, which are

converted into calcium carbon-atebycertainmarineorganismssuch as corals and oysters tomake their shells. When theseorganisms die, their shells de-posit on the sea floor and finally

turn into sedimentary rocks.▀From living things to the land.As

plantsandanimalsdie,carbonisdepositedintheground.Someofthesedeadorganismsgetburiedunder the ground, and after mil-lions of years, change into fossilfuels due to high pressure andother physical and chemicalchanges.▀From living things to the atmo-

sphere. Carbon dioxide is regu-larlyreturnedtotheatmosphereby the process of respiration inplants and animals. Other natu-ralsourcesofCO2areforestfiresand volcanoes.▀From fossil fuels to the atmo-

sphere. When humans removefossil fuels (coal, oil and gas)from below the ground surface,they reintroduce carbon thathas been out of circulation formillions of years to the globalcarbon cycle. Burning fossil fu-els releases this stored carbon,converting it to CO2, which thenentersandbuildsupintheatmo-sphere.

A N N A M C C A R T N E Y, acommunications and educationspecialist for Pennsylvania SeaGrant, can be reached by e-mail [email protected].

Follow carbon’s natural global cycleBy ANNA MCCARTNEYContributing writer

This page brought to you by:

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

The 2010 local Envirothon winners, team Green Flash from North EastHigh School, placed third in state competition.

The Erie County ConservationDistrict is looking for new andreturning high school studentsand their advisers to participatein the 2011 Envirothon.

This exciting competition wascreatedin1979byPennsylvania’sSoil and Water Conservation dis-tricts to inspire young adults toconserve ecosystems and intro-duce them to natural sciencecareer options. It quickly gainednationalpopularityasahands-onoutdoor contest that challengeshigh school students in the fieldof environmental science.

Since its creation, more than500,000studentsacrosstheUnitedStates and Canada have had thechance to shine in the five testingcategoriesofsoils/landuse,aquat-ic ecology, forestry, wildlife andcurrent environmental issues.

Each team consists of three tofive high school students and anadviser. During the competition,theteammembersworktogethertoanswerbasicquestionsineachcategory.Thereisnocosttoregis-ter or participate; the Conserva-tion District covers all costs forthe regional competition. Butadvisers must create a team andcontactKristenCurrier,theEnvi-rothon coordinator, for the com-petition informational packet byFeb 1.

The 2011 Erie County Enviro-thon is scheduled for May 5 atthe Erie County ConservationDistrict’s Headwaters Park. Thelocal winning team will advanceto the state level. The state win-nerthenadvancestothenationalcompetition.

For more information aboutthis opportunity contact Currierat [email protected] or call 825-6403.

Teens can competein 2011 EnvirothonBy ANNA MCCARTNEYContributing writer

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO/Department of Energy

The carbon atom, an essential building block of all living organisms,constantly moves through all living things, and through the oceans,atmosphere, and earth’s crust. The natural carbon cycle experiences anatural equilibrium but emissions created from burning fossil fuelsthat have been underground for millions of years are not absorbed inthe natural cycle, so it builds up in the system.

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO/NOAA

There is a close correlation between population growth, fossil fuel useand increased atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration.

Alternativesustainableenergysolutionscouldeaseproblemsat-tributed to burning fossil fuels.

More than 140 students whoattended the Erie Earth ActionYouth training day at the TomRidge Environmental Centerlearnedaboutchoicesthatcouldreplaceoreliminatetheneedforfossilfuels,includingwind,solar,geothermal, biofuels and greentechnology.

“When the wind blows, any-thing connected to the wind-mill will get the wind power. Wemademusicwithpowerfromourwindmill,”saidOrionMcConnellfrom the Perseus House CharterSchool of Excellence MaritimeCenter.

FortLeBoeufstudentCaitlynnOrr was also impressed with thewind power. “There is a guy thatmakeswindmillsoutofoldwheel-chairmotors,whichisawesome,”she said.

Brent Hartsting from the Per-seus House Charter School ofExcellence liked building thewindmills because he likes elec-tronics. “It would be a good job,”he added.

Joanna Connell student TylerVaughn said: “Solar (energy) canpowerAmerica.Youcanevengetsolar cell-phone chargers.”

Teachers and students ingradesfourtoeightexploredsus-tainableenergysourcesandtech-nologies with local experts fromHeroBX,thelocalbiofuelsplant,andfromSolarRevolution,NorthCoast Energy Systems, GannonUniversity, Mercyhurst Collegeand Renewergy. Educators fromthe Pennsylvania Departmentof Conservation and NaturalResources also led some of theworkshops for students.

A N N A M C C A R T N E Y, acommunications and educationspecialist for Pennsylvania SeaGrant, can be reached by e-mail [email protected].

Alternative energy dayfires up Erie studentsBy ANNA MCCARTNEYContributing writer

What: Special showing of action film, “Wintervention” by WarrenMiller.Where: Tom Ridge Environmental Center, Big Green Screen TheaterWhen: Friday and Saturday at 7 p.m.Cost: Advance tickets are $10 or $15 at the door. Tickets areavailable at Peek’n Peak Ski Resort, Tom Ridge EnvironmentalCenter Big Green Screen Theater, Erie Sport Store Peach Streetlocation, Elements Board Shop and Erie Ski Club or by contactingthe Big Green Screen at 838-4123 or Scott Cable at 873-3071 [email protected].

Learn More

Tuesday, January 4, 2011 | Erie Times-News | GoErie.com | 3D