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What is Carbon Reservoirs

Building STEM Skills Through Environmental Education
Places in which carbon is fixed and stored for various periods of time that can be later exchanged with carbon in other reservoirs. Forests, oceans, lakes, and soils are examples of carbon reservoirs. When the carbon is fixed and unable to leave the reservoir as in limestone or deep ocean sediments of planktonic calcites, it is in a carbon sink .
Published in Chapter:
Atmospheric Chemistry: An Overview – Ozone, Acid Rain, and Greenhouse Gases
Donald J. Kern (Delaware State University, USA)
Copyright: © 2021 |Pages: 47
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-2711-5.ch007
Abstract
The complex chemistry and basic physics of Earth's atmosphere will be reduced to three main sections within the context of the chemical reactivities of predominant chemical species and the additional role of photochemistry from solar radiation. The three areas of chemical interactions and photochemical reactions in the atmosphere discussed are (1) the reactivities and relationships between chemical species that can affect tropospheric and stratospheric ozone concentrations, (2) reactions between chemical species that create acid rain, and (3) the chemical species, sources, and reactions that are believed to be contributing to climate change. These three areas in atmospheric dynamics will comprise this chapter along with some of the documented effects on ecological systems, human health, and infrastructure.
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