Climate Change Consequences In Guam

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Introduction.

Climate Change is a major problem in today’s society. It is one of more complex issues facing us today. Due to rapid industrialization and growing population, the concertation of greenhouse gasses in the earth’s atmosphere has been greatly increased. As these gasses build up in the atmosphere, they strengthen what is known as the ‘greenhouse effect’. The purpose of this literature review is to critically analyze scientific journals on the chosen topic and to opinionize the papers.

Literature Review of the Chosen Journals.

1. Title: What Climate Change means in Guam?
Author: United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Year Published: August 2016.
Source: EPA 430-F-16-062.
Link: https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2016-09/documents/climate-change-gu.pdf …show more content…

Guam is a territory of the United States located in the western Pacific Ocean. The journal defines the many forces of climate change affecting its surrounding island. To begin with, the article educates about the damage done to the coral and the coral reefs around Guam. Research conducted by the EPA have shown that the average water temperatures around Guam have risen more than one degree over the last century. The islands of Guam lie in one of the most tropical storm active region. Scientists have found out that the typhoons that hit the region have more potential energy as a result of the warming of oceans. The paper also mentions the rise in sea level and the flooding of the coastal region. The author emphasizes on the damage occurred to the human health as a result of climate change, which include; heat strokes, dehydration and cardiovascular and nervous system …show more content…

The major gases in the atmosphere, nitrogen and oxygen, are transparent to both the radiation incoming from the sun and the radiation outgoing from the Earth, so they have little or no effect on the greenhouse warming. The gases that are not transparent are water vapor, ozone, carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, and the chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). These are the greenhouse gases, explains the article. Over the past 30 years, NASA has launched a number of satellite missions have been launched to obtain the data about Earth’s radiation budget that are critical to understanding the greenhouse effect. An important need in the further development and verification of climate models is the acquisition, assembly, and analysis of reliable climate data. The highly accurate, self-consistent, and long-term data sets that will be acquired by the Earth Observing System (EOS), as part of NASA’s Mission to Planet Earth, with a series of satellite launches beginning in 1998, are designed to fulfil that

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