Water Circulation and Climate Change

Journal Title: Modern Approaches in Oceanography and Petrochemical Sciences - Year 2018, Vol 2, Issue 3

Abstract

Humanity annually takes away more and more lands from nature: plows it under crops, floods hydroelectric reservoirs, cuts down forests, concretes and asphalt areas of new cities and roads, falls asleep. “The total area of the dumps alone is approximately equal to the area of Mexico, to the three territories of Ukraine, or 5 territories of Germany” [1]. The total area of land killed in the world, according to various sources of information, ranges from 10 to 76 percent for 2015. The essence is not the volumes, but the essence is that these areas are intensively growing, have become commensurate with the land area of the whole Earth and the time comes when it will become 100% - natural habitats disappear. All water evaporated from such territories, at best, does not change its structure. As they came with precipitation, they returned back to the atmosphere. At worst, they are impregnated and combined with chemical elements, which then, it happens that, with a strong concentration, they fall out of acid rain. Evaporations from degraded areas are substantially complemented by evaporations from technological processes of industrial and municipal production. Of all things, only man came up with using water for other purposes. Nature did not expect such volumes of evaporation from washing and drying clothes, dishes, asphalt, production processes - everything that was created by civilization. All evaporation of water, which has not gone the way of transformation in living organisms and plants, is alien to nature, the cycle of natural transformations is shrinking, man-made them. Such evaporation can be called artificial.

Authors and Affiliations

Oleg Halidullin

Keywords

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  • EP ID EP626226
  • DOI 10.32474/MAOPS.2018.02.000136
  • Views 77
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Oleg Halidullin (2018). Water Circulation and Climate Change. Modern Approaches in Oceanography and Petrochemical Sciences, 2(3), 149-150. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-626226