Underground organisms initially thought to trigger chemical interactions that trap carbon below the soil and thereby create a carbon skin were found to play a more complex role that could involve releasing carbon back into the atmospheric due to high carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere, North Carolina State University found. In a paper published in the Aug. 31 edition of IScience/I, North Carolina State University researchers show that important and common ...Sunday, 2 September 2012
Organisms Trapping Carbon in the Soil are also Responsible for Releasing It Back into Atmosphere
Underground organisms initially thought to trigger chemical interactions that trap carbon below the soil and thereby create a carbon skin were found to play a more complex role that could involve releasing carbon back into the atmospheric due to high carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere, North Carolina State University found. In a paper published in the Aug. 31 edition of IScience/I, North Carolina State University researchers show that important and common ...
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