Now here is where I find a problem with all this. I see no science to back this up. However, if we are in a Geomagnetic reversal or excursion this often happens and species in various parts of the earth suffocate in past excursions or reversals. As humans who live in technological areas of earth you just take water and split it into hydrogen and oxygen and wear oxygen tanks whenever the air gets thin enough. However, people in 3rd world countries might often just die in this kind of condition.
So, what I'm saying is I don't see carbon dioxide causing this but excursions and reversals do. What happens is in a reversal or excursion is that oxygen isn't contained in the atmosphere by the magnetosphere and flies off into space, so any animals, birds, people etc. below when this happens over one or more areas sometimes suffocate as a result. This doesn't happen everywhere at once by the way, just places where oxygen is flying off into space as the earth travels through space. Mars has this problem too which could be from a variety of reasons in it's past. I suspect Mars once housed some of our ancestors but then they had to come to earth or leave the solar system instead when they couldn't breathe Mars air anymore or grow food. The same thing could happen to earth now.
So, what might be happening is governments are hiding the truth of why people and animals might suffocate now.
Report: The World Will Run out of Breathable Air Unless Carbon Is Cut
As
representatives from 195 nations gather in Paris to hammer out a global
agreement to slash greenhouse gas emissions, a new study finds that the
failure to do so could leave the world gasping for breath. Marine
plants such as phytoplankton are estimated to produce more than half the
Earth’s…
TakePart.com
Report: The World Will Run out of Breathable Air Unless Carbon Is Cut
As representatives from 195 nations gather in Paris to hammer out a global agreement to slash greenhouse gas emissions, a new study finds that the failure to do so could leave the world gasping for breath.
RELATED: 6 Foods That Are Going Extinct Because of Climate Change
By 2100, the earth at sea level could have atmospheric oxygen levels comparable to the top of Mount Everest today. “And as far as I know, people cannot normally stay on Everest without oxygen masks for more than a few minutes,” Petrovskii said.
The threat has been “mostly overlooked” by climate scientists, Petrovskii said, noting that such a global disaster would come with little notice.
“A distinct feature of this catastrophe is that there will be few warning signs and little change before it is too late,” he said. That’s because phytoplankton can continue to produce oxygen and photosynthesize at levels below 6 degrees of temperature rise.
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Marine plants such as phytoplankton are estimated to produce more than half the Earth’s atmospheric oxygen,
according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. For
the study, Sergei Petrovskii, an applied mathematics professor at the
University of Leicester in the United Kingdom, calculated how
unrestrained global warming could affect phytoplankton and thus the
ocean’s ability to generate breathable air. He ran computer models that
looked at what would happen to phytoplankton’s ability to
photosynthesize at different temperatures.
If the world’s oceans warmed
by 6 degrees Celsius—a realistic possibility if global emissions
continue unabated—the tiny plants would halt oxygen production,
according to the study, which was published Tuesday in the Bulletin of Mathematical Biology.RELATED: 6 Foods That Are Going Extinct Because of Climate Change
By 2100, the earth at sea level could have atmospheric oxygen levels comparable to the top of Mount Everest today. “And as far as I know, people cannot normally stay on Everest without oxygen masks for more than a few minutes,” Petrovskii said.
The threat has been “mostly overlooked” by climate scientists, Petrovskii said, noting that such a global disaster would come with little notice.
“A distinct feature of this catastrophe is that there will be few warning signs and little change before it is too late,” he said. That’s because phytoplankton can continue to produce oxygen and photosynthesize at levels below 6 degrees of temperature rise.
“Under
a 2-degree increase, we will probably see no change; the 4-degree
increase would already be dangerously close,” Petrovskii said, adding
that more research is needed to determine what increase in global
temperatures would halt phytoplankton’s ability to photosynthesize.
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• How to Cut Deforestation in Half to Save the Climate
Original article from TakePart
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