Business Articles, Internet Resources and Tutorials - Senyum

Titles Titles & descriptions

Books Around the House Make A Difference in Literacy Rates
Parents should lead by example

Getting Married? Read this 1st.
Original gift ideas for your Bridesmaids and Bestman.

Telling the Hard Truth
Why do we keep the truth from people? Usually it's for one of the following reasons (or a combination): we don...

Articles Tutorial
Articles on advertising, sales management, business, stock market, hobbies, health, lifestyle, family relationships, online business, money, stock trading and m...


Link Exchange

Exchange links with our website.


Sponsored Links

   

The Breath of Life

Navigation: Main page » Spirituality

 Print this page 

Author: Lois Grant-Holland

Article source: http://www.loisgrantholland.com/. Used with author's permission.

The earth is wrapped in a thin, loose shell of gases - which we call the atmosphere. The mix of gases that make up the atmosphere has changed greatly over the eons.

A Flemish alchemist and physician named Johann Baptista van Helmont was the first man to discover that the air we breathe is not one single substance but a mixture of substances. In a manuscript published after his death in 1644, he argued, based on his experiments, that an invisible "spirit" curled from every one of the bubbling flasks in his alchemical laboratory, and from each of the red coals in his furnaces. "I call this Spirit, unknown hitherto, by the new name of Gas," he wrote - coining the word from the Flemish pronunciation of the Greek word "chaos." One of the gases that he discovered was carbon dioxide, a gas that is now creating chaos on a global level.

Since van Helmont's discovery, we have come to realize, through scientific experimentation and persistent measurements, that carbon dioxide is almost everywhere. By the 1950s, Charles Keeling, working under the auspices of the California Institute of Technology, began extensive tracking of carbon dioxide levels on the planet. He recognized a pattern that had eluded others: the carbon dioxide concentration always dropped as the sun rose in the sky, and then in- creased as the sun went down. The count stayed high all night, bottomed out in the afternoon, and began climbing again after sundown.

The life cycle was becoming more and more obvious to the scientific community: every day, as the sun rises, every green thing on the planet - from skunk cabbage to club moss - begins inhaling carbon dioxide, for use in photosynthesis. As the plants inhale, the amount of gas in the air begins to drop.

Photosynthesis is, literally, "building with light." The building process takes place inside plant cells within organelles call chloroplasts. Inside each choloroplast, plants break apart molecules of carbon dioxide into carbon and oxygen. They also break water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen. Then they put most of these atoms back together in new combinations to build simple sugars like glucose, throwing out some of the oxygen as "trash." The process requires steady supplies of sunlight for energy, and steady supplies of carbon dioxide and water for raw materials.

By afternoon, plants have taken a good deal of carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere. At the same time, however, the plants are busily eating the sugars they have made for themselves. This is the metabolic process of respiration. Respiration means literally "to breathe back, to blow back;" it is a form of combustion, a very slow burn which consumes oxygen and produces carbon dioxide.

Photosynthesis and respiration are two of the most fundamental processes of life on Earth, and they run in opposite directions. Photosynthesis takes in carbon dioxide and releases oxygen; respiration takes in oxygen and releases carbon di- oxide. The two processes also run on different timetables: photosynthesis works a day shift, because the process requires sunlight and most plants take in carbon dioxide only when the sun shines. The gas enters the plant through a myriad of microscopic pores, stomata, on the underside of each green leaf. These little doors open at sunrise and close at sundown on every plant on the planet.

Respiration, on the other hand, works both a day shift and a night shift. At four o'clock in the morning - while the stomata are closed and green leaves are taking in virtually no carbon dioxide - the leaves are still respiring, blowing back carbon dioxide to the air. At the close of most twenty-four hour periods, most plants have "borrowed from and returned to" the atmosphere about the same amount of carbon dioxide.

This "breathing cycle" is apparent throughout the plant life on the planet: plants and trees breathe once a day. (Animals, including people, aren't a natural part of this cycle. They have no cholorplasts, so they get their energy and their raw materials by eating plants, and by eating the animals that have eaten plants, and by inhaling the oxygen released by plants.)

So?

So this natural breathing cycle of the earth's plant life is a major factor in one of the major ecological problems facing the planet: the greenhouse effect.

It is the atmosphere that keeps us warm; outer space is a very cold place, and it is the layers of gases that wrap the planet that protect us from freezing. In this sense, the Earth's gases are like the glass walls of a greenhouse.

The gases which have the highest volume in the atmosphere are not the gases that are having the most powerful greenhouse effect. Nitrogen and oxygen - which constitute 99% of the atmosphere - have almost no greenhouse effect at all. The three gases that DO have a major effect are water vapor, carbon dioxide, and ozone.

Like nitrogen and oxygen, these three gases are almost perfectly transparent to the sunlight that streams to the Earth from the Sun. However, water vapor, carbon dioxide, and ozone are partially opaque to the infrared heat radiation that rises from the sun-baked ground.

When this infrared radiation strikes the water vapor, carbon dioxide or ozone molecules, the molecules give off energy in the form of more infrared rays. In a sense, every carbon dioxide molecule in the atmosphere is like a dark star shining in all directions - up, down, and sideways. In this way, invisible rays of energy get passed back and forth many times between the atmosphere and the layers of the planet before the energy finally migrates to the top of the atmosphere and escapes into the vacuum of outer space.

That is the greenhouse effect in a nutshell: the dark rays bounce around inside the atmosphere many times before they finally manage to leak out into space. Water vapor, carbon dioxide, and ozone - rare though they are - turn the world's air into a giant heat trap. And for billions of years, life on Earth has been dependent on this peculiar property of these three gases (and a few others that are even rarer) to keep the planet livable.

The carbon dioxide level in the atmosphere is a vital ingredient in the natural life cycle of the planet and the life forms it contains; if the amount of carbon dioxide varies by too much, the results on the planet could be disastrous. A minute drop, the scientists discovered, could chill the entire planet, and may have been the force behind the last Ice Age.

But what are the effects of a rise in the carbon dioxide count? As early as the 1890s, scientists predicted that this change could very well heat the planet to heights outside all human experience. It became increasing clear that the problem lay not in a possible drop in the carbon dioxide levels, but in a rise - based on new technology that introduced tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere - that would change the atmosphere itself. Any change in the atmosphere would, of necessity, change the life cycles themselves.

Beyond the daily photosynthesis/respiration cycle is a larger cycle. To understand it, we need to enlarge our vision to include the whole pageantry of the seasons, the annual passage of foliage from green to red and yellow to brown and black, in terms of invisible effects. Plants take up carbon dioxide mainly in the spring and summer, their green and busy season. They drop their leaves in the fall. The leaves wither and decay, and the carbon that the plants had borrowed from the air that summer returns to the air.

Here again, photosynthesis and respiration march to different drummers. Photosynthesis is mostly a thing of summer. It begins in April, peaks in June, and drops near zero in October, when there is too little sunlight. In other words, it runs hard during the light part of the year and all but quits during the dark part of the year.

Respiration peaks in June, too, but unlike photosynthesis it never stops (except where the ground is frozen) - it keeps on going, throughout the winter and all year round. The life forms that decompose the fallen leaves include fungi, bacteria, worms, termites, slugs, and leaf molds. They compete to eat the dead leaves, to rot the fallen branches, and together they return most of life's borrowed carbon to the air.

Every year, when green things inhale carbon to put out buds, shoots, leaves and stems, the biosphere inhales. When the leaves fall and molder on the ground, the biosphere exhales. In the most beautiful, regular and global cycles in nature, the planet itself takes one breath a year. It is that breathing pattern that has been put at risk by the rise in carbon dioxide levels.

The atmospheric counts for the years since the 1950s show a definitive pattern: each fall, there is a rise in the record. Each summer, there is a dip in the record. Each winter, the high is higher than it was the winter before. The impact is clear.

The breath of life on this planet is changing. Since the 1970s, the breathing of the biosphere is no longer regular. The Earth's inhalations and exhalations seem to be getting bigger and bigger. We know it's happening, but we're not sure why, and we're not sure what the long-term effect will be. We do know that the amount of carbon dioxide in the air is rising.

The rise in carbon levels was not - contrary to popular opinion - a recent event, although our ever-increasing technology has made the situation worse with each passing decade. The internal combustion engine was invented in the 1860s - the days of our great grandparents. It was the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, and in 1860, we released about 93 million tons of carbon into the air.

Between 1860 and 1958, industry burned fossil fuels at a rate that doubled every two decades or so, injecting a total of more than 76 billion tons of carbon into the air. Almost 80 billion tons of carbon went into the air between 1860 and 1960. Since 1960, another 80 billion tons have been added. It took one hundred years to release the first half of the fossil carbon found in the atmosphere today; it took less than thirty years to release as much again. Human beings are now releasing more than 5 billion tons of carbon into the air each year.

The Industrial Revolution threw the human sphere into high gear; people began burning more coal and charcoal to fuel the engines and to smelt steel to make more engines. They kilned clamshells and limestone to make lime for concrete for more and more factories, cities, roads between cities. They built better engines that did more work and they fed them more coal, oil, and natural gas, in a crescendo of carbon dioxide that is still building today. In effect, every human being on the planet is now shoveling one ton of carbon into the air each year.

The temperature of the planet may be rising as well. These two changes in the atmosphere are presumed to have triggered the change in life's breathing cycle; it makes sense that the changes that are taking place on the planet would show up first in the breathing of the planet itself, which is the grand summation of all of the action of life on Earth.

With every year that passes, geochemists are discovering more and more changes in the workings of the planet, and trying - desperately - to figure out what it all means. Without disentangling cause and effect, they can't all agree that the changes are alarming. With the breathing of the world, these are a few of the perspectives being offered:

GROWTH. The green plants of the biosphere LIKE the extra carbon dioxide we are putting into the air. It gives them more raw material for photosynthesis. Each year the biosphere gets bigger; because it is bigger it takes in more carbon dioxide. It inhales more and more deeply.

DECAY: The biosphere is decaying faster than before. There is more and more respiration each winter. Each year it inhales a little more. More and more of the "stuff of life" is unraveling and returning to the air.

GROWTH AND DECAY: Both may be accelerating. A bigger biosphere would be expected to inhale and exhale more deeply. Each summer there are more plants to inhale gas; each winter there may be more plants and animals to devour and de- compose the summer's fruits.

TIMING: Some say the change can't be explained with either growth or decay. The breathing of the world is changing too fast for that. Something else is going on; some suggest that the build-up of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere may be altering the timing of either photosynthesis or respiration or both. If their work schedules are changing positions on the calendar, that would also change the breathing of the world.

Technological optimists tend to feel that the Earth is breathing more deeply. The biosphere LIKES the extra carbon dioxide. To this perspective, life on the planet Earth is flourishing.

Technological pessimists tend to feel that life's breath is labored - each year more labored than the year before. The biosphere is running out of breath; the Earth is gasping.

Were we to chart the carbon dioxide levels on the planet as they are now, and as they would have been without the Industrial Revolution, we would have a clear picture of what we have done in the name of progress. One line would show the balance of nature; the other would show our species in the act of unbalancing nature. Here, the sum of life on Earth; there, the sum of our impact upon life on Earth. These two lines would bring the present human predicament, in all it's diversity, into the sharpest possible focus.

It is, after all, a matter of life and breath.

Lois Grant-Holland is a Life Path Focus Counselor offering Life Path Focus Sessions, Karmic Astrology Charts, Channeled Guidance, Intuitive Readings and Classes and Workshops to spiritual seekers on all positive paths, and is the site facilitator at The A.N.S.W.E.R. - (The Seeker's Resource Guide to Alternative, New Thought, Spiritual Growth, Wellness and Enlightenment Resources.) You can visit her website at http://www.loisgrantholland.com




Common Work At Home Success Characteristics
Just because a person has these characteristics, it does not ensure success and, on the flip side, a person is not necessarily doomed to failure just because he...

Six Principles of Successful Investing
Start your investment career out with this these 6 steps, and you will be well on your way to accomplishing your investment goals.

Its What She Didnt Say
When I hear your voice inside my head it makes me think of you every single day

Time Management: How to Make Your Meetings More Productive
In most organizations, meetings are often the biggest time-wasters. With a bit of planning, it's possible to both shorten the time spent in meetings and to make...

Its the Most Wonderful Gift of the Year
Learn how to master those special moments in life to create happiness and well being.

Are You Ready To Start A Business? Take This Quiz and See
Don't get discouraged! A "no" answer to any of the questions will identify an area for development -- not a roadblock. I am available to help if you would like ...

Low Carb Diets - The South Beach Diet, Atkins Diet, Zone Diet, and More
There are many new popular diets out there. Here are some things to remember when deciding which diet program is best for you.

Are Public Schools A Menace To Your Kids? -- 11 Danger Signals
Public schools can be a real menace to your child's mind, love of learning, and future. Author Joel Turtel gives some of the danger signals...

The Success of Your Web Site with King Content
A brief guide for beginners to getting your web site moving with some regular content.

Are You Willing To Pay The Price?
Do you believe that there is a price to pay in anything and everything? I do. But I am not necessarily referring to monetary terms. You see, there is a price t...

Traditional Bridal Shower Gifts
The tradition of hosting a bridal shower for the bride to be grew out of a desire of the friends and family of the bride to get to know each other better, stren...

Measure for Measure
Can you imagine playing hockey without a goal? Basketball without hoops and nets? Football without a goal line? Golfing without holes or greens? There may...

How To Help A Sick Team Become Healthy
How to fix a team that is full of animosity, has fragmented interpersonal relationships, mistrust and infighting. Part of the "Ask the Team Doc" Q&A series.

Are You an Emerging Champion?
In terms of life success, there are four pretty obvious levels of accomplishment: First is the class of the current winners - those who have figured out what th...

How to Use Pay-Per-Click to Define Your Target Market
In the information age information sells. Define your target market and gain a short customer list at the same time!

How to Use Articles to Generate Free Traffic to Your Website
Writing articles that are available for reprint is an excellent way to generate traffic to your website. Webmasters,ezine publishers, and bloggers are always ...

The Answer to Your Worst Networking Nightmare
Imagine you just met your ideal client at a networking event. He's friendly, has great ideas and could use a valuable person like you to help grow his business...

Beware the Shopping Mall Monster
Like me, you've probably been offered a fair old number of these by now... and, if you're like most people, chances are you maybe own at least one or two. They ...

Jobseekers! Look For Smoke, Not Fire
"If you always do what you've always done, you will always get what you've always received," said some wise person. This is certainly true when it comes to job-...

The Flu Hysteria and Your Family
Find out some pertinent facts concerning the flu and how you and your family can cope with it

How Effective is Your Email? How Can You Tell?
If you're not tracking the results of your email marketing, then you don't know how you're spending your time and money. This case study outlines five lessons ...

From Birth to Teen, Spirituality in Children
Empowering children with Spirit is an adult quest to which we should all aspire. It means recognizing that children at an early age, when they are only able to ...

How to Create Quality PR Results
One of the pathways to quality public relations results is that equally certain reality that good public relations planning really CAN alter individual percepti...

Want a Beautiful Limestone Floor but Worried About The Maintenance? Read On
Limestone is one of the most porous natural stones in nature. This high porosity makes it more susceptible to absorption of oils, dirt and grime than other natu...

 
Article Categories

Home
Web & Online Business
Affiliate Revenue
Auctions
Blogging RSS
E-Books
E-Commerce
Email Marketing
Ezine Publishing
Internet Marketing
PPC Advertising
SEO
Security
Site Promotion
Spam Blocker
Traffic Building
Web Design
Web Development
Money & Finance
Credit
Currency Trading
Debt Consolidation
Debt Relief
Insurance
Investing
Loans
Mortgage Refinance
Personal Finance
Real Estate
Stocks Mutual Funds
Taxes
Wealth Building
Business
Advertising
Branding
Business Tips
Careers Employment
Copywriting
Customer Service
Entrepreneurialism
Management
Marketing
Networking
Network Marketing
Presentation
Public Relations
Resumes & Cover Letters
Sales
Sales Management
Sales Training
Small Business
Strategic Planning
Team Building
Health & Medicine
Acne
Alternative Medicine
Beauty
Depression
Diabetes
Exercise
Fitness Equipment
Hair Loss
Medicine
Meditation
Men's Issues
Muscle Building
Nutrition
Nutrition Supplements
Weight Loss
Women's Issues
Yoga
Family & Relationships
Babies Toddler
Dating
Holidays
Home Improvement
Interior Decorating
Landscaping & Gardening
Marriage & Wedding
Parenting
Pregnancy
Relationships
Sexuality
Hobbies & Lifestyle
Casinos & Gambling
Cooking Tips
Crafts & Hobbies
Fashion & Style
Golf
Humanities
Mobile Cell Phone
Music
Outdoors
Pets
Photography
Poetry
Politics
Recipes
Science
Vacation Rentals
Writing
Writing Articles
Self-Improvement
Attraction
Coaching
Creativity
Goal Setting
Grief & Loss
Happiness
Innovation
Inspirational
Leadership
Motivation
Organizing
Positive Attitude
Religion
Spirituality
Stress Management
Success
Time Management


www.senyum.net - This website contains articles on wide range of topics. Articles on advertising, sales management, business, stock market, hobbies, health, lifestyle,
family relationships, online business, money, stock trading and many more are available.
www.senyum.net covers USA, UK, Canada, Australia, China and Germany : - complete articles online business - articles tutorial.
Copyright © 2006 SmileMedia Co. All rights reserved.