The Revenge of Gaia

http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Revenge_of_Gaia an entity of type: Thing

La Revanche de Gaïa : Préserver la planète avant qu'elle ne nous détruise (titre original : The Revenge of Gaia: Why the Earth is Fighting Back - and How we Can Still Save Humanity) est un essai de vulgarisation scientifique de James Lovelock, publié en 2006. Il s'agit du quatrième ouvrage d'une série consacrée à l'hypothèse Gaïa. Dans cet ouvrage, l'auteur explique comment la Terre peut réagir violemment à la pression anthropique et ajoute des considérations personnelles sur la politique à mener pour la préserver de cette pression. rdf:langString
The Revenge of Gaia: Why the Earth is Fighting Back – and How We Can Still Save Humanity (2006) is a book by James Lovelock. Some editions of the book have a different, less optimistic subtitle: Earth's Climate Crisis and the Fate of Humanity. The book introduces the concept of the anti-CLAW hypothesis. Lovelock proposed that instead of providing negative feedback in the climate system, the components of the CLAW hypothesis may act to create a positive feedback loop. rdf:langString
rdf:langString La Revanche de Gaïa
rdf:langString The Revenge of Gaia
rdf:langString Earth's Climate Crisis and The Fate of Humanity
rdf:langString The Revenge of Gaia:
rdf:langString Earth's Climate Crisis and The Fate of Humanity
rdf:langString The Revenge of Gaia:
xsd:string Penguin Books
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rdf:langString Penguin Books
rdf:langString La Revanche de Gaïa : Préserver la planète avant qu'elle ne nous détruise (titre original : The Revenge of Gaia: Why the Earth is Fighting Back - and How we Can Still Save Humanity) est un essai de vulgarisation scientifique de James Lovelock, publié en 2006. Il s'agit du quatrième ouvrage d'une série consacrée à l'hypothèse Gaïa. Dans cet ouvrage, l'auteur explique comment la Terre peut réagir violemment à la pression anthropique et ajoute des considérations personnelles sur la politique à mener pour la préserver de cette pression.
rdf:langString The Revenge of Gaia: Why the Earth is Fighting Back – and How We Can Still Save Humanity (2006) is a book by James Lovelock. Some editions of the book have a different, less optimistic subtitle: Earth's Climate Crisis and the Fate of Humanity. The book introduces the concept of the anti-CLAW hypothesis. Lovelock proposed that instead of providing negative feedback in the climate system, the components of the CLAW hypothesis may act to create a positive feedback loop. Under future global warming, increasing temperature may stratify the world ocean, decreasing the supply of nutrients from the deep ocean to its productive euphotic zone. Consequently, phytoplankton activity will decline with a concomitant fall in the production of dimethyl sulfide (DMS). In a reverse of the CLAW hypothesis, this decline in DMS production will lead to a decrease in cloud condensation nuclei and a fall in cloud albedo. The consequence of this will be further climate warming which may lead to even less DMS production (and further climate warming). The figure to the right shows a summarising schematic diagram. Evidence for the anti-CLAW hypothesis is constrained by similar uncertainties as those of the sulfur cycle feedback loop of the CLAW hypothesis. However, researchers simulating future oceanic primary production have found evidence of declining production with increasing ocean stratification, leaving open the possibility that such a mechanism may exist.
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