Antarctic Ozone Hole Leveling Off
twistedfuck writes: "An Irish Time article reports that the size of the hole in the antartican ozone layer is levelling off and should begin reducing in size. It seems like it should be welcome news but it is tempered by the fact that more UV radiation will reach the southern hemisphere this year because the hole will persist longer. Unfortunately I can not find any details regarding the NOAA report on their website." Update: 11/06 17:31 GMT by H :Thanks to Isaac Lewis, NOAA Sysadmin and Slashdot reader, for pointing out more information, as well as pointing out the ozonelayer site.
Are we to believe that this reduction in size is a result of global regulation of CFCs, or could it possibly just be part of a natural cycle? Too bad we didn't get satellites before styrofoam.
Reduction in size of hole in ozone
Size of the annual hole which forms over the Antarctic has levelled off, say researchers.
Dick Ahlstrom reports
The ozone hole over the Antarctic this year is smaller than last year's but is still colossal. At 26 million square kilometres, it is about the size of North America.
The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said this week that observations suggested that the size of the annual hole, which forms over the Antarctic during its spring, has levelled off and will slowly decline in the coming years.
Researchers in New Zealand have warned, however that the 2001 hole will probably persist longer. This, they say, will allow more ultraviolet (UV) radiation to reach the earth in the southern hemisphere.
Too much UV disturbs the growth of plant life. It increases the risk of cataracts and skin cancer in humans.
The hole is caused after the release over many years of chlorine compounds that drifted into the upper atmosphere. There, they react with sunlight over the Antarctic and Arctic to destroy ozone, a gas which absorbs UV radiation coming from the sun.
Last year's hole reached a record 30 million square kilometres.
Repeated depletions over the years have reduced the total ozone overhead by about 15 per cent in temperate parts of the southern hemisphere.
Pleeease can you spell it right? :) I swear it isn't hard!
I don't know much about ozone and such, but why would the size of the hole start to decline? Are we producing additional ozone that could somehow refill the hole? Is the remainder of the ozone layer spreading out to fill the gap?
Are there any meteorologists/ecologists out there who know how this works?
Ceci n'est pas une sig
IMHO Mother Nature takes care of herself. Fires to clean the earth, wind to sweep away the garbage, seasons to refresh the vibrance of life and so forth...
This article suggests that though the total mass of the hole is reducing in size, it is also maintaining itself for longer periods. Without research, an immediate assumption would suggest that this would be letting the same doses of UV rays reach the earth annually.
I'd say Mother Nature is attemtping to counteract our efforts and regulate the earth the way she has done for millions of years!
And given our (human) track record.. I'd give 1000:1 odds in favor of Mother Nature doing the right thing.
Never try to beat a professional at his own game!
Who Cares? This only affects those of us that
actually go outside, and in all honestly, how many of us have actually been outside in the
past two weeks. (Outdoor-type quake mods do not count)
mccann@telalink.net
I was just looking into this not too long ago. Strangely enough, we met someone from Israel while we were travelling in New Zealand who said it had closed, which I was sure was wrong. Turns out it's still there.
And remember it's not really a hole, i.e. there is ozone present, it's just at significantly lower levels.
Here are a couple of sites I found useful :
www.epa.gov/ozone/science/hole/holehome.html
www.atm.ch.cam.ac.uk/tour/
When we were in New Zealand the sun feels different ! It feels very intense and somewhat uncomfortable, and it was only the first month of spring. You HAVE to use sunscreen.
Absolute statements are never true
..does that mean i cant use those very useful packing peanuts anymore?
The problem with environmental theories is that they are just that...theories.
Much like chemistry of 50 or 100 years ago in many ways would seem laughable to what we know now (and will again in 50 years probably), the science of the environment is a young and new science. Unlike chemistry or physics, it's much harder to do experiments, and the timescales involved are immense.
The truth is we simply know too little about the Earth to make longterm models and whatnot that are dead on. We can make GUESSES, and maybe even good guesses, but there is still so much that we don't know at this point.
As a side note-it is my understanding that CO2 levels during the time of the dinosaurs were much higher than they are today. The Earth can handle huge changes with relatively little environmental impact. It's been around (what? 5 billion years?) a long time, I don't think humanity can destroy it in a little over two century.
Scott
Thus, the issue of whether the global ozone layer shows a steadily depleting trend is still controversial.
Taken right from the essay. Although I would agree with you in that I'm not totally convinced on the issue of 'ozone layer depletion' either, it is interesting to see that this article begins with a scientific basis of 'the uncertainty' of research on ozone layer cause and effect and quickly progresses to the fact that it costs lots of money to phase out 'potential' ozone depleting chemicals and whether or not it is in the US's interest to stay in potentially expensive environmental pacts.
I think one of the key things that we have come to realize at the end of this century is that many of the large scale phenomena we witness here on Earth are the products of an extremely complex and often non-linear series of events. Our technology has reached the point where it can and often does cause serious changes to our environment. One of the problems with the point of view that this essay takes is that it neglects 'precaution' in favour of the idea that we should be more concerned with short term economical gain.
If something has the potential to possibly cause damage, isn't it more logical to stop using it? Even if we are only right 1 in 10 times on whether something can cause damage to the environment, I would rather waste the money controlling the nine than sweeping the one under the rug.
If CFC's caused the hole, why isn't it above Europe/America? Why does it only appear in the southern summer? same time, same place. Why Antarctic (miles from anywhere) rather than Arctic? Why don't we just plug it? Ozone being easy enuf to produce, even by accident. Why do we care?
Oh well. Luckily the world will end AFTER I'm dead.
Department of Homeland Security: Removing the rights real patriots fought and died for since 2001
It is BS that the hole in the ozone was formed by CFCs because the people that said that had done no reaserch on it. You can check it out on junkscience.com or buy the book Scilensing Science.
is it a coincidence that the USian Time wouldn't carry that story, and there's no mention of this on NOAA's site?
it doesn't sit right with me.
To summarise the findings, it seems the density of Chlorine from CFCs has peaked, and it is expected the Ozone hole will gradually (i.e. over the next 50 years!) disappear.
It now seems to be an interesting case of us screwing up our environment, working out what we'd done, and fixing it. However, you could consider that we just 'got lucky':
Compare this with the current situation re global warming, and this looks less like a successful victory and more like a warning shot across the bows
Back in '92 (I believe - not sure), most new air conditioners started being manufactured with CFC-free refrigerants. The "new" coolant requires different tolerances in the compressor and evaporator systems. What this means (as anyone who has tried to retrofit an older car air conditioner with CFC-free coolant can tell you) is that the new coolant doesn't work as well in older systems. This has actually created a black market for the older coolant (freon, as I recall) from countries where it is still manufactured.
If this research is correct, the coolant switchover and strict rules regarding the recovery of waste freon have probably played a part in the improvement. Even if this is an inconvience for auto A/C mechanics, it's a small price to pay to preserve our valuable ecosystem.
So if you're driving an older car and your recharged air conditioner doesn't seem as cold as you remember it, you're right. But you're helping save the enviorment.
---
DRM is like antifreeze, to the MPAA/RIAA it's sweet, to the consumers it's poison.
More info on the same subject.
Every time I hear someone talk about the ozone hole that we (humans) are creating, I have a little laugh to myself. I mean, seriously... Human beings populate such an insanely small percentage of the Earth's surface (I mean, far less than half is even land anyway), how can you believe that we could really have such an immediate (read: 80 years) impact on something like the global climate? Come on, I think that's getting just a little bit of a big head... We wish we could control the weather...
Do not read this sig.
Also, if there is not enough ozone, it is very easy to make: electric sparks create ozone. We could build a hydro dam and dedicate it to ozone production. Then we could transport this ozone back up there too.
This was reported in the USA Today over a year ago, does the news really travel that slow?
In the great words of Lewis Black:
"We've got rockets, we've got plastic wrap... Fix it!"
because it hase NEVER appeared due to human activity. The ozone "layer" exists because there is oxygen in our atmosphere, and ozone creation is the continuously ongoing result of the solar UV. The southern "hole" is simply due to a few factors, such as the antartic vortex, which insulates Antartic continent from the rest of the atmosphere during the night (i.e. from april to november). There has been no measure of the ozone layer "width" in the past prior to the "discovery" of the "hole". This is total bullshit. Now a little question : when did the patents on CFC expired ? When did the worldwide campaign against CFC begin ? When did the so-called "replacement" product to CFC patent will end ? Who own(ed) the patents ?
-- javaDragon is an instance of JavaDragon.
Where is the evidence of the increase of human skin cancers due to "ozone hole" ?
-- javaDragon is an instance of JavaDragon.
A good description of the process which results in the ozone hole can be found here.
Basically, the intense cold of an antarctic winter creates a vortex which isolates the air over the south pole, and allows build up of the CFCs. When the summer comes, the Chlorine from the CFCs acts as a catalyst to destroy the ozone.
It now seems to be well understood - but it's one of those things that nobody could have predicted before it happened.
I thought that weather patterns tend to not cross the equator...
If that's true (and even if it's not), why is the ozone hole over the ANTARCTIC? Aren't most of the CFC/ozone-eating gases being emitted in the NORTHERN HEMISPHERE? Why isn't there one over the arctic?
General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
because they used some NASA program to calculate the size and mixed miles with kilometers....
the hole is everywhere
-- just a geek - trying to change the world
This means we can settle Antarctica after all! No more worrying about the DMCA
the potential recovery of the ozone hole is
due to the world wide reduction of CFCs.
It is not mother earth recovering itself !!!
It is not clear however, whether the global warming
could stop the recovery, since the warming
of the lower levels in the atmosphere is
connected to a cooling in the stratosphere.
This cooling enhances the desctruction of ozone.
more FUD than M$, no "real" facts in evidence and opinions from a-hole to breakfast.
... it does!
Drive like your life depends on it
I live in Melbourne. If you look at the piccies of the hole, you'll see it nowhere near approaches Melbourne.
I have to use sunscreen when I go outside. I've got fair complexion and I burn up in the sun. Yet when I visit Sydney, I can spend 2 hours in the sun without as much getting a lick from sunburn.
You have to wonder what the situation is like in Hobart or Antartica.
From what I understand, CFC's are no worse than the chemicals that replaced them. As I understand it, Some company had a patent on the substance used as a delivery mechanism in aerosol sprays... but their patent was about to run out on one of their most widespread chemical products, losing them lots of money.
So, what would anybody who knows they can buy off the people with a nice environmental scare do?
They spread a massive chunk of propaganda and toss out some lobbyists. Meanwhile, they develop a product that is almost identical to the original, and just as bad for the environment (reactively).
So, now nothing has changed for the good or bad of the environment, but that company got to remain the exclusive source of chemicals for spray cans.
A near complete lack of proof for the fact that humans are causing either.
No shortage of people claiming that humanity is more or less solely to blaim.
I do not think anyone can argue with the fact that human generated pollution is not helping but given the complete absence of long term data on the development of the Ozone layer the Ozone gap could (I am not saying it is just that it could) just as well be an natural phenomenon. Which is what responsible scientist have been saying from the very beginnin. So this development should not be all that suprising. But then serious science seems always to get gagged by the rhetoric of fanatical enviromentalism and conservative politics just like those few brave souls that blasphemed by suggested climate change happens rapidly over a few hundred years or even less and not over tens of thousands of years or even less time after analysing the results of the Greenland glacier ice core drillings. And that perhaps humanity is only contributing to/accelerating a climate change and not casusing it. Perhaps the stiffnecked Conservatives and the Treehuggers alike should let scientist do their work and not use their work for mudslinging before it has even produced definitive results.
Only to idiots, are orders laws.
-- Henning von Tresckow
Just as a flame-worthy side note, there is a lot of antagonism in New Zealand towards the US because of Bush's decision to boycott the Kyoto(sp?) Protocol. The United States is demonstrably by far the worse offender with carbon dioxide emissions, and the general consenus in the scientific community is that these emissions are causing, or at least accelerating the hole in the ozone layer. To be honest, Usians aren't the most popular people (as a society, not individuals--I personally have met several and they were wonderful people), and this is just one more straw on the proverbial and cliched camel's back, with the United States saying what is effectively "Stuff you, we'll do what we want and who cares about your ozone hole causing rising skin cancer and medical costs".
I didn't mean that as a flame, just a point of view. I'd rather you respond than just mod me down...I'm aware that I am oversimplifying it; this is merely the general trend of thinking in Kiwiland.
A word can paint a thousand pictures
A few more web sites that I've come across, giving a saner perspective of Global Warming, etc.:
CITIZENS FOR A SOUND ECONOMY
http://www.cse.org/globwarm.htm
COOLER HEADS COALITION
http://www.globalwarming.org
THE ADVANCEMENT OF SOUND SCIENCE COALITION/THE JUNK SCIENCE HOME PAGE
http://www.junkscience.com
MOBIL
http://www.mobil.com
SCIENCE & ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY PROJECT
http://www.his.com/~sepp
MARSHALL INSTITUTE
www.marshall.org
The Cooler Heads site is the one with the more realistic views.
"Making linux GPL was the best thing I ever did" - Torvalds. I'd hate to see the worst thing...
CO2 is responsible for global warming, not ozone depletion.
CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons) and some other gases like halon(tm?) are responsible for the thinning ozone. Most of these gases have been banned under the Montreal protocol for some years now, but because they are largely inert they can rise far into the stratosphere (which takes them quite a few years) where they do their damage. What happens up there is that the suns intense UV rays break the CFC molecules up and the chlorine ends up binding with an oxygen atom from the ozone. The actual reaction is here
CO2, on the other hand, absorbs infrared radiation from the earth reradiated from sunlight and keeps the heat in the atmosphere. It basically acts like a big blanket. CO2 is what the Kyoto Protocol is trying to limit.
---
I didn't want to leave this space blank.
I just read the article, and it seems to be that a terciary source is not quite on target.
The title of the article seems to differ from the actualy findings by the scientists...
Critical reading anyone?
Has/will the US actually start regulating against polluants? I believe (may be wrong) that the US regulations are the most lax in the developed world (particularly wrt cars). Do the american ppls actually care about this issue? Will this news create more apathy? Will America continue to be the dirty old man of the developed world?
I believe there's a meteorological phenomenon called the polar vortex that causes the ozone hole to occur at the South Pole and during Antarctic summer. See this link for more details. Short version is, during polar night there's a huge whirlpool of cold air that circulates there all night causing the CFC's we've emitted to more rapidly destroy the ozone in the region. By summer, the vortex stops, so the ozone hole disperses. There's also a vortex in the North Pole, but because there are a lot of irregular land masses there, the vortex up north is a lot weaker, hence the ozone hole up north is far smaller. But global warming is causing the northern vortex to strengthen, and hence increase the size of the hole up north.
This is what I get for watching too much Discovery Channel!
Qu'on me donne six lignes écrites de la main du plus honnête homme, j'y trouverai de quoi le faire pendre.
I'll just point out a slight inaccuracy in your highly informative answer. CO2 increase in the atmosphere does directly relate to the ozone hole problem. CO2 increase causes global warming. Global warming causes the (presently) weak polar vortex in the North Pole to strengthen. Strengthening of that polar vortex causes the ozone hole in the northern hemisphere to increase in size. Well, many more people live in the land around in the higher latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere...
That's the thing with the environment; everything is interconnected.
Qu'on me donne six lignes écrites de la main du plus honnête homme, j'y trouverai de quoi le faire pendre.
I've heard there have been some, um, anomalies in the flocks. Are they growing wool again? How about the lamb-meat? Is it still tender and juicy from the prolonged basting? :-)
So you believe more the people who make made money of using CFC than those "wacky environmentalist".
I understand that it is far more logic to believe reasearch financed by people who have a financial interrest in it, than people who believe there is a risk for health...
I myself, tend to believe more of the crackpot pseudoscience than the greedy bastard pseudoscience, thank you very much!
Besides, I don't think it costed billions, else I would bet that using alternatives would never have been implemented that fast!
The fact that the hole is peaking 10 years after we limited the use of CFC is rather a proof that they were right IMHO.
And you part about ice melting in the north pole is just so stupid! Global warming is a fact, the north pole is disapearing and water levels are rising. Look at statistics and ice studies...
Just keeping your head inside your arse will not make these problems go away.
There are evidences that we are destroying nature, look at the rivers! Now imagine the whole world polluting as the US and think at how long it would take for the world to become a dump!
T
he US citizens are not even one 20th of the world population but they manage to produce half the pollution. It's time for people to think ahead a bit and try to show a better example! Saying "no" to an international initiative to reduce emissions is not the best example the US could give to rising economies!
Black holes occur when God divides by zero.
We need more of those here on /.
is that, when we're out of fossil fuel to burn, it will decrease the polution levels drastically ;-)
One shall speak only if what one has to say is more beautiful than silence
You know those fine men in Washington are going to use this as evidence that there is no need for tougher environmental laws. Not that they'll understand the difference between global warming or the ozone hole or what have you.
Can someone find this study and maybe post a link? Have there been any reports of corrolation between the reduction in the use of CFCs in many countries and the leveling off of the hole or was it a natural phenomenom after all.
To the guy in NZ who talked about the anamosity toward the US for backing out of the Kyoto treaty. We're all feeling very patriotic, but you please remember a majority of the folks in this country did NOT vote for Bush and co. We voted for a guy who thought (according to his book) Florida would be under water in a few years if we didn't do something about the environment! Didn't like either of them, but I vote a bit on the enviromental side with a strong streak of anti-relgious fundementalism. I think pulling out of the Kyoto treaty even if you DIDN'T agree with its premise was a mistake because it dishonored our country. We played a big part in setting the thing up then canceled at the last minute. For that I am truely sorry.
Unfortunately, due to recent events it will be a number of years before we'll pay a great deal of attention to the environmental problem. It may be a number of year before we link the gas prices with all of us buying SUV's that get 8 miles a gallon (not me!), but we will..hopefully before we melt the place.
-Andy
Actually, I think that was more due to the fact that you were thinking autumn with shorter days than spring. When I lived in NZ in 97/98 (south end of the Mainland) I found no difference.
So long and thanks for all the fish . . . !!!
Ok, here's the deal:
Stratospheric ozone is created by bombarding normal, happily breathable O2 mollecules with ultraviolet light, splitting the O2 into a pair of O1's. These O1's eventually bump into another O2 mollecule and create O3. Big woop.
Where there is solar UV light, you'll probably see some ozone popping up. Since the Antarctic Desert is in the dark for a good chunk of the year, you'll discover a not-too-surprising lack in stratospheric ozone over winter and well into the Spring. Also not surprisingly, we have an ozone hole over the north pole.
Over the north pole, of course, there isn't quite as extreme a desert as over the south, and there are more large land masses nearby to carry air better.
Back in the 30s when the first weather measurements were taken in Antarctica they found almost identical levels of UV light hitting them as during a modern winter. Greenies prefer to depend on climactic models rather than empirical evidence these days, however, so their multi-million dollar research is stating the problem is getting bigger, even if someone else's multi-thousand dollar research is saying the opposite.
The ozone hole is the result of too many people putting faith in government, who can't predict the future more than a few weeks down the road, and weather men, who can't predict the future more than a few days down the road, and expecting their government-funded computer models to be able to predict the future years down the road.
"Look at me, I invented the stove!" -- Ben Franklin
that was from C.Springs, CO. They were pointing out how worthless radio carbon dating is. They performed test on a metal knife blade and found it to be billions of years old. Based on that, I heard ppl saying that Radio Carbon dating was garbage. But c14 depends on live systems, not inatimate objects. Has always been the way. Yes, the vortex exists. and yes O3 is continually produced. The problem is that CFC's accumulate and break down only very slowly. They then breakdown the O3 as a form of a catylist with out ever being used up.
Bush Sr. and pals went to Yale.
Or don't you recall GHHWB's infamous remark regarding Mike Dukakis, calling him one of those northern Harvard types? Why the country's press didn't immediately call him on it for going to Yale, I'll never understand.
It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
Many Americans, if not most, believe that we need to change. The problem is the money that floats around is incredible. GWB chases it,as do most politicians. These guys need to re-think about stuff, but they really have a short-term view. Consider the following:
GWB says that we need to be concerned with USA's Oil dependancies. So he wants to drill in Alaska. SO what is wrong with (disregard the environment issue for the moment)?
It will take >10 years to get the thing going.
Florida coast could yield 1/2 the fuel that Alaska does and do it IMMEADIATLY. But he will not do it becuase of his brother. In addition, he has cut back massivly on alternative energy.
What is sick, is that at this moment he is wrapping himself in the flag and normal ppl are buying it. bad, bad, bad.
While I am against the drilling, I would argue for opening up Florida, CO, and Alaska. But to drill in there, the companies should have to put in escrow the money that would be required to clean up the spill. Likewise, huge tax should be placed on it. Finally, alternative energy should have more money thrown at it, not less.
But it won't. This is Amerika.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
I agree with your statements, and I've read similar articles in scientific periodicles. Those articles, however, are usually well hidden and no longer than half a page, because they aren't very popular. So why is rational thought about the O-zone not popular? Well it's not sensationalist, it doesn't give people something to "fight" for, and people who are "environmentally concious" just hate to admit that they are wrong.
Another thing that I don't think you touched on, our climate goes in cycles. I don't recall the exact dates, but I know that some time ago in recent history (1960's maybe?) all of the popular scientists were warning of global cooling. That's right, the earth was getting too cold and there was going to be another ice age if people didn't do something about it. Our climate is not as stable as some would imagine, and contrary to popular beleive we humans have nothing to do with it. Yes, in large cities there is smog, but that is a microclimate just around the city, and it dissipates in the atmosphere and goes away eventually, doesn't affect the global environment. The global climate is something that is very dynamic and not easily understandable. One thing is for certain though: there is no proof that we have a problem with the O-zone layer.
~ now you know
emissions are still not going back ... anyone who understands the problem knows, that temperature is important .. for its getting warmer on earth due to pollution-facts , the synthesis wont bind o3 .. but its still there .. in the next cold season the whole will be bigger than before ..
Ummm... It's a lot sunnier in Australia. Even on a clear day in Pennsylvania, you still have A LOT of moisture in the atmosphere, which blocks a lot of the radiation.
Perhaps you should be comparing Arizona with Australia.
You raise an important issue, but keep the distinction clear: Individuals are often conscious of environmental issues, but company executives who have oil fields destroying the earth whilst living comfortably in Aspen typically just don't care. There is the difference: Caring individual, greedy corporation.
I say the best approach is to better educate individuals, and clamp down hard on companies who sadly ignore environmental concerns. Sadly for America, there is a two party system which means that environmental issues will not take center stage until such a time as it is an obvious survival issue. At least in many European countries, we can vote for a "green" party and lend a bigger voice to environmental concerns. So, for those of you in European countries, vote green. We all know that they are hardly going to rule a country outright, but the more voices, the better.
"We kill to cure, with cures that kill" - Skinny Puppy
http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories/s792.htm
lots of links and pretty pictures available.
(And just a note: Radio Free Nation had this back in the middle of October, but what do I know? [smile])
"It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
I work for the Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory which is part of NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration). If anyone is interested, our lab launches balloons that help measure the level of ozone in the atmosphere at the South Pole.
More information can be found at the South Pole Ozone Page.
Eric
The ozone hole was discovered back in 1958 by the British Antarctic Survey. At the time, they saw it as a natural phenomenon caused by the South Atlantic Vortex -- a well established air movement pattern.
Now, there may be some real science behind CFCs and ozone depletion. The original lab work that demonstrated the chemistry was real. However, most of the material that comes my way about CFCs in the atmosphere seems more like spin than science. Maybe someone here can point us to some more measured and competent publications than I have been able to find.
Before we jump to too many conclusions about all the anti-CFC material, we should bear in mind it is standard practice for corporations to seek methods for making obsolete materials for which the patents have expired. Some creative lobbying and legislation is a great way to stop third-world companies turning out your products on the cheap.
Of course it is leveling off. The ice age every 50-55K years is a natural cycle. Deal with it.
Those of us that bothered to educate ourselves on this instead of listening to the line of Liberals and other alarmists knew this was going to happen. It's always happened. Man can not destroy the ozone... unless we killed ourselves in the process.
For ozone to be destroyed you need:
Although I am sure that other chemicals can break down ozone, CFCS are the most common and best at doing it because they are lighter than air and they normally DO NOT react with anything around us (at or near sea level). These two properties make them fly up high into the ozone layer. The non-reactant portion is what made these chemicals so great and so unthought of as causing problems. To destroy ozone molecules you have to have some very specific conditions:
Okay so now how do you get these conditions, and why is there no northern ozone hole? Well we have uv-light and aplenty so that's not a problem. The first issue is gathering a lot of CFCs (and ozone) into one place, this is taken care of by the Antarctic vortex. The vortex is there during certain months of the year and it builds up a lot CFCs and Ozone into a small space. In the northern polar regions it isn't so prominent because there are landmarks to break up these winds, however there are some weaker ones that are present in the north. Okay, we got ozone and CFC and light, now we need to get rid of the nitrogen. This is handled by formation of nitrogen clouds, which are clouds that are really cold and really high up that contain droplets of condensed nitrogen, and now the nitrogen is gone in the atmosphere and CFC havoc may occur. This doesn't happen in the north because the north pole is much warmer (or at least enough to prevent this). Now the scary thing is if we get a cold winter in the north then a big hole can form in the north, and if you look at a globe there are millions upons millions more people in the upper northen latitudes than there are in the southernmost latitudes. And if you use the following statistic, -1% ozone layer = +2% UV-light on the surface of the Earth = +4% skin cancer, which is sorta bad when applied to cities like London and Quebec and what not (yes these ozone holes can affect huge areas).
Now before someone tries to beat me down for using pseudo science, my mother is on the DIAL team which is a NASA group that measures the ozone hole using a LIDAR(Laser detection) system. These were the people who went to confirm the ozone hole when NASA originally thought the TOMS satellite was malfunctioning because it had almost no readings in the south pole for ozone. I may have bungled some of the facts so if I did please correct me. I think most of these chemical processes have been tested in a lab so they are empirical evidence.
As for the the stabilizing of the ozone I can only make a few conjectures: 1) the most likely IMHO, the temperature in the southern pole haven't been as cold lately, I know I have been going through some wacky yearly climate cahnges here, 2)the Earth is mucuh more resilient than we like to think, or 3) We're missing something that is there and it may not be only the CFCs or it could be a natural cyclical event, but I have trouble believing it is natural with all the scientific evidence I have seen. There are still too many CFCs in the ozone layer for it start repairing, and due to the resilience and the near-non-reactance of CFCs they will be around for another 60-100 years, before the ozone makes a come back and another 100 after that to repair itself.
----------
Just your ordinary BOFH
http://killertux.org
Ok, first, I agree that climate has been warmer. But there weren't as many people around at that time. There where also more trees (or green stuff).
;o)
Desertification + increased polution + dioxide levels on the rise = what is worrying me
Imagine, China and India burning all their forest and using as much energy as western countries, and I think we are in big trouble... Well that is if we don't find another way to kill humanity first
Ok, volvanoes produce more toxic emission than the whole industrial civilization... I am still not convinced about that one personally. What kind of pollution are we talking about here? Which substances?
Concerning experimenting, we a bit in a dead end. But I think that the attitude saying "we can't prove it, so let's not care!" is a bit childish.
So far we have got only one planet, so we should better be careful about it... Well that's my opinion anyway.
Black holes occur when God divides by zero.
I was in Argentina last boreal summer. The sudden recovery of the ozone layer was big news there. I went down to the beach for a weak and the sun would not burn your skin nearly as fast as in previous years, when 20 o 25 minutes under a 12pm sun was enough to get a suntan.
Global warming is a self correcting phenomenon. Yes, we may be accelerating the process, but it's essentially self correcting.
Ozone is created (primarily) in our atmosphere by sunlight hitting high altitude free floating water molecules, which break up into hydrogen and Ozone (O^2). The hole in the Ozone layer allowed sunlight to pour through onto the Antarctic ice cap, sublimating (look it up) ice into water vapor. The increase in water vapor allows larger amounts of water to make it to the higher altitudes where the high energy photons break it up into ozone, closing the hole.
Similarly, ice caps melt, causing water and clouds to form, the clouds shield the earth from sunlight, the temperature drops and ice forms again. We start the cycle all over again.
Of course, I'm not a scientist, but it makes sense to me and I've always thought this was true. With the exception of sunlight, the Earth is essentially a closed system, self reparing. The Earth is essentially a Raid Sunlight Motel: Energy checks in, but it doesn't check out.
Moreover, those nutty-crunchy-granola grannies who stand at the corner of Saks 5th Avenue protesting Fur and Leather don't seem to realize that hey, those plastic shoes they're wearing came from animals too, just 10,000 years deceased.
Most of the environmentalist bunk over the past few decades is exactly that: bunk. It generally hasn't been well thought out. -Why- do we care if the left-handed spotted ocelot is wiped out? There is no reason we should care. We're on the top of the food chain. We have no natural predators (except tigers, but we've pretty much taken care of THAT, and again, why do we care, except that they're pretty?). The Earth is at our disposal. I challenge anybody to point to one single endangered species that if we it wiped out, its dissapearance would significantly affect Mom and Dad Public's life. Whales? Whalers would be affected (and maybe the perfume industry, but they don't use whale oil any more), but there aren't a whole lot of whalers out there. Last time I checked, it was illegal to whale anyway (more run away envrionmentalism). Go on, find me one. And don't tell me the Cow is endangered.. You might just change my mind.
George Carlin had a point which I think applies here: euphemisms are basically an attempt by people to salve their conciences. Same thing with environmentalism (in general, there ARE exceptions). Environmentalist causes are by and large taken up by guilty, rich, well-fed white people. If you doubt this, take a look at the protestors on the corner. How many of them need a bath or a meal (except by choice: I know many envrionmentalists who need a bath, and most vegetarians need a steak, but it's not because they don't have the resources, it's because they choose it)? Almost none. They have the time to protest because they can afford it. They have the time. You don't see many homeless people protesting, because they're too busy trying to get a meal and a bath. I can tell you this because despite being a well fed white man myself, I have personal, visceral, experience with the "transient lifestyle". (Quoth George Carlin: "If you want to know what a moronic word 'lifestyle' is, all you have to do is realize that in a technical sense, Attila the Hun had an 'active, outdoor lifestyle'" Take my advice, homelessness is a crime of violence. Avoid it if you can.
The Dopester
"Yes, I'm a Karma Whore, but I'm doing it to pay my way through school."
Observations have just finished one 22-year solar activity cycle. Solar activity has been at a peak this year (producing magnificant aurora visible across much of the USA last weekend). This ascpect of natural causes should be understood too.
I've seen too many examples of people overinterpreting there data decrying "disaster is at hand" or "no way the environemnt could be hurt". So little is known about natural activity, that the scientists shouldn't over do it.
NOAA has an interesting page on the ozone hole, animated by days in 2001. Very cool to see the levels change and drop.
Any connection between your reality and mine is purely coincidental.
This is you Antarctic Ozone layer. We're levelling off at our cruising altitude of 198,000 ft and expect an on-time arrival in Omaha. Thanks for flying Ozone Air, and have a nice day.
Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
mod parent down, please.
This has more detail than the Irish Times article:
l ay er.html
http://www.gsfc.nasa.gov/topstory/20011016ozone
How much do you want to bet that we'll start seeing immediate levelling-off of the carbon dioxide level the moment the Kyoto accords are signed?
Here's some statistics and information on the ozone hole from the Climate Prediction Center:
e /sbuv2to/ozone_hole.html
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/stratospher
Bush Lies Watch
http://www.ozonelayer.noaa.gov
BTW - for anyone that cares, the ozonelayer site runs on a Linux box
yeeaaaaaaahhhhhh ha HA!!
Finally, someone let me OUT OF MY CAGE!!
Now time for me is NOTHIN' cause i'm counting no age.
Now I couldn't be there, now you shouldn't be scared!
I'm good at repairs, and I'm under each snare!
INTANGIBLE, bet you didn't think so I COMMAND YOU TO
Panoramic view, look I'll make it ALL manigable.
Pick and choose, sit and loose!!
All you different crews, chicks and dudes
Who you think is really kickin' tunes?
Picture you gettin' down in a picture tube, like you lit the fuse
You think it's fictional, mystical? Maybe.
Spiritual, hearable. What appears in you is a clearer view cause you're too crazy
Lifeles, to know the definition for what life is
Priceless for you because I put you on the hype shit
You like it? Gunsmoking' righteous with ONE token.
Psychic among those, POSSESS you with one go HEY
I AIN'T HAPPY, I'm feeling glad
I got SUNSHINE, in a bag
I'm useless, but not for long,
The future, is coming on
I AIN'T HAPPY, I'm feeling glad
I got SUNSHINE, in a bag
I'm useless, but not for long,
The future, is coming on
It's coming on, it's coming on
It's coming on
This is natural, it happens. Did you know that Saddam Hu-Insane created more pollution during the Gulf War than anything to date? Did you know that liberal Democrats use this "scare tactic" to create more revenue for their BIG Gov? Did you know the European Union is a bunch of tree hugging faggots? Do not report on this liberal garbage, it makes /. look bad. Ever wonder why Liberals cry freedom of speech (media) but they try to censor music (Tipper Gore) and make decisions (legislation laws)that they (Democrats) don't think you can make on your own? Also, they believe in taxing everything to generate more $$ for their BIG Gov.
-------- Of all the things I've lost, I miss my mind the most. --Ozzy
Ozone is harder to produce and easier to break down when it is cold, which is one reason ozone is at its lowest levels over the poles in winter (also when there is a deficit of sunlight).
Does this mean that since the earth is warming and the Antarctic ice cap is melting that ozone production will increase down there? I.e., global warming is actually helping to produce more ozone and heal the hole?
A "Hole" Lot of Alarmism Should Be a Lesson in Marrakech
Last weekend I stopped into a local "international car show". You know, where all the manufacturers set up in an trade hall or whatnot.
Looking at the window stickers on SUVs, it was readily apparent that the average fuel economy was around 15-18 MPG. Some were much worse, like around 12 MPG. The popular Dodge Durango with the big V8 is one such example. I recall that being 12 city, about 17 highway. It was amusing watching the suburbanite yuppies lining to sit in the Ford Expedition, GMC Denali, Cadillac Escalade, etc. while safer, more fuel efficient, reliable and better engineered cars like Volksagens, Audis and Volvos languished, unloved. How silly this is.
When you factor in that *millions* of these things are on the road, and hundreds of thousands replacing smaller, more fuel efficient cars, it's readily apparent that SUV fuel economy IS part of the problem.
Doesn't bother me. Someday it'll all burn off and we'll be left with.. nothing! One of two things will happen. A massive economic collapse, followed by social and political turmoil as people figure out how they're going to move goods, get to the grocery store, take mom to the doctor, etc. This, worst case, would be followed on by starvation, disease and ultimately, complete collapse of Western society. No joke. How are you going to get lettuce, Cheerios and Tylenol trucked to your store? Alternatively, the yuppies can ditch their SUV's, give us a few extra years of petroleum, and while we have time, begin working on real solutions to the problem.
What will we choose? I have no doubt we'll choose the first, because we aren't a democracy any longer, certainly not a rational society; we're a corporate-capitalist state where your consumer tendencies drive corporate decision making. If YOU don't decide to take individual responsibility, don't expect the government or Mobil oil to bail you out around 2030.
They can't prove it. Oh, sure, they can come up with tons of circumstantial evidence, to be sure, but the one thing that they cannot do is establish causality beyond a doubt. It's impossible, there are just simply too many variables, and how can they possibly establish a scientific control group, when the experimental group is the entire planet? The answer is...they can't.
So, what's the next best thing they can do? Go on the PC offensive, or course! It's simple and it's proven to be effective time and time again. They can just demonize any thought or information that doesn't conform to their preconceived determination, and use the willing accompices in the media and academia to ensure that their views will be the "accepted" ones. Anything that doesn't march in lockstep will be declared "evil" and ostracized.
If you don't believe me, just watch as this post gets modded down by some "friends of the earth", just like my last one did.
In Soviet Russia, Chuck Norris will still kick your ass.
Only recently have we been able to obtain temperature data on the atmosphere as a whole, or in the depths of the open ocean.
There probably isn't enough data to extract any long-term trend from what would be the expected short-term variations.
And besides, we're living at the tail end of an ice age (ice ages, too, if we include the "Little Ice Age"). I would think some warming would be expected.
Remember, there is no control in this "experiment"....
no light
no ozone
take pictures
scare ignorant public
waste your points on me
dimwits
This is a good site for an alternate theory about the ozone Predict Weather.
Chers Chris
One of these days, I would like to travel to USia and see it for myself. As an American, I would probably feel right at home there, because it sounds like it measures up to all the worst assumptions about America we often hear from certain Euro-trash snobs and Labatt-drinking Canadian hicks.
It's only the interest paid on a homeowner's mortgage that's tax deductible, the same as the interest on a rental property mortgage.
So the renter has his rent subsidized to the same degree as the homeowner.
(No, it's not really that simple - taxes never are. But that's a pretty good first order approximation. Hell, given the tax-deductibility of just about every rental expense, renters are subsidized *more* than homeowners. It's just that renters tend to have a higher chance of being a too-lazy-or-drunk-or-high-in-the-morning-to-go-to- work-and-keep-a-fucking-job deadbeat than homeowners, so those of us who have rented out houses for whatever reason need to build in a fudge factor to cover the risk of getting a deadbeat tenant, driving up the cost for the good ones....)
Every blooming image over the pass couple years has shown that the Ozone layer is thicker over South Africa and New Zealand than practically anywhere else in the Southern hemisphere!
So whats the problem?!
Sure, there is a ozone hole over Antartica, but everyone acts as if the problem is here in NZ.
Me thinks the brain dead media is scaremongering and the climatologists are feeding them to whip things up for grant season...
Sure you get burnt here in sunny NZ, but thats got more to do with staying in doors all winter 'cause its freezing and then going bouncing about the great out doors all summer 'cause the sun doesn't go down until it almost should get up!
The Southern Ozone pole apears at about the time that the South Magnetic pole's flux lines connect thru the Sun's magnetic poles in a phenomenon known as "Connection". Due to a rotational twist in the flux lines, several potential tubes are created drawing hydrogen ions down into a a custard cone shaped volume, centered above the prime meridian. This not only explains the loss of Ozone but also explains the inexplicable water vapor found in the hole.
The true mystery of the Ozone hole isn't the loss of ozone in the hole but but a crecent of elevated ozone in areas that should be depleted of ozone due to being in near total darkness for 6 months. This Ozone surplus is chiefly located in an area due East to the South Pole; presently located off the Coast of Eastern Australia.
That will really screw up the ozone with all the Cherenkov radiation!
If your an amateur botanist your probably aware that good soils that are being sold today contain styrofoam nodules that last forever & aerate the soil, keep it from compacting, allowing moisture to circulate amongst the roots.If you smell the soil with those litle white grains , please note the absence of the odor of chlorine.
The so called Ozone Hole is so much bull based on the chemical industry's desire to regulate the most important group of chemicals known to nmankind. CFCs are immensely important to the World but have been disallowed, based upon inconclusive evidence of any sort.
The Southern Ozone pole apears at about the time that the South Magnetic pole's flux lines connect thru the Sun's magnetic poles in a phenomenon known as "Connection". Due to a rotational twist in the flux lines, several potential tubes are created drawing hydrogen ions down into a a custard cone shaped volume, centered above the prime meridian. This not only explains the loss of Ozone but also explains the inexplicable water vapor found in the hole.
The true mystery of the Ozone hole isn't the loss of ozone in the hole but but a crecent of elevated ozone in areas that should be depleted of ozone due to being in near total darkness for 6 months. This Ozone surplus is chiefly located in an area due East to the South Magnetic Pole; presently located off the Coast of Eastern Australia.
The systems used to measure OZONE levels
in the upper atmosphere where powered by
batteries. These early sixties era devices
may very well have outgassed a significant
amount.
We don't know for sure if the measurements
were accurate. Scientists don't always know
what is important data and what is not.
The ozone measurements were probably done in
concert with a lot of other things. If
these were DOD programs (which they were)
we don't even have access to what those
payloads were and what kind of outgassing they did.
Thus any conclusions about ozone levels
must be backed up with hard data. The
data from these early sixties balloon launches
may be available. To my knowledge no one
has accessed it to determine the validity of
data published in the early 60's.
Just because numbers show up in a technical
reference doesn't mean that they are correct.
Upper level atmospheric research didn't progress
until the 1940's after WWII. Thus data
from the early part of this era (the space age)
is shakey at best.
We now have the much more reliable method of
LIDAR to measure gas levels at remote places.
In the early 1960s this technology did not
exist. Thus Ozone measurements that indicate
a higher level at this earlier time are flawed.
-Ex-aerospace dude.
You can read all about this at your
local library. . .
It is called the MAGNETIC POLE of the EARTH.
have you heard of that?
"Cut word lines. Cut music lines. Smash the control images. Smash the control machine." - William S. Burroughs
PENIF IN EAR = DANCE ALL NIGHT~~~1 NO MOD WILL EVAR SEE THIS ROOFLES.
OH NOES! TEH INTARWEB IS BORKEN!
Here in the realm of reality, the Sun's UV rays are blocked when they hit "O2" molecules the "O2" then is spilt into two "O1" molecules. When the newly formed "O1" attaches to a neighboring "O2" it forms O3 or "Ozone". Ozone is strictly a byproduct of the process. So now one can understand why every year during the several months of polar darkness, Ozone cannot be found. Why does the media publish articles that are void of any valid science, maybe soon we will hear of a new environmental crisis "Spontaneous Human Combustion" Next Time Someone Says to you, "Don't use hairspray ..blah, blah.., the Ozone keeps us from getting cancer", you can reply " No Idiot, Oxygen does"
The hole actualy starts to form when the sun starts to rise.
I know I've been there and watched it happen day by day.
Please, learn the proper English plural of the word 'virus.'
There's no need to be making up words in hopes of sounding smarter. You only end up looking silly.
Back in High School chemistry we had to do a section on environmental chemistry to fulfill the IB (International Baccalaureate) requirement. From what I recall ozone itself is created by the ionizing (bad) UV light that supposedly does damage to humans and wildlife. Once the ozone is created the energy from the UV light has be expended creating the ozone and is no longer harmful. CFCs can then come over and react with the ozone, and turn it back into oxygen. CFCs didn't interfere in the production of the ozone it merely ripped off the extra oxygen to make more O2 which was then free to react and make more ozone, repeat ad nauseum. The lack of ozone has no detrimental effects. Either way the non-ionizing UV light still gets through. It was the O2 that stopped the ionizing UV light, not the ozone, and no one's claiming there's a lack of O2.
Thanks for sending me this. It is a good example of the confusion that exists on this issue. The Antarctic Ozone Hole was discovered, recognized and accepted by the scientific community in the last half of the 1990s. There was a split as to whether the cause of the depletion was "dynamic", that is caused by the migration of ozone poor stratospheric air from the tropics to high latitudes or "chemical" from pollutants such as CFCS, NOx etc. This was resolved in the early 1990s when the chemical processing of chlorine compounds---most of the chlorine originating from CFCs---on ice or acid hydrate surfaces in the cold stratosphere was accepted on the basis of measurements during a Scientific field campaign in 1988 or 1989, involving mostly scientists form NASA and NOAA.
The role of ice hydrates or heterogeneous chemical reactions has never been fully explained to the public and is reflected below. Mostly we think of speeding up chemical reactions by adding heat. What happens in the cold stratosphere is that when things get cold enough for icy particles to form, below -84C, the molecules that contain chlorine lock in, form on these icy surfaces and produce 'chlorine monoxide which then breaks up as soon as the first very weak light of spring returns to the polar night.
So, chlorine and ozone are not enough, some kind of surface is needed. This involves a phase transaction and the process is non linear. It's not a slope like everyone is accustomed to see from projections of CO2 or whatever.
When the ozone hole first formed over Antarctica it seemed to alternate in size in the late 1980 being small one year and larger the next so it was hypothesized that it was influenced by the Quasi Biennial Oscillation. That didn't last long as the "Hole' got bigger and bigger each year throughout the 1990s but more importantly it lasted longer and longer. It started off breaking up in October then November until in 1998 and 1999 it lasted into December---When summer starts! That is the sun gets more and more overhead and surface irradiation increases.So any ozone depletion---all things being equal--will produce more UVB on the surface.
During the 1990s the Ozone Hole started passing over the tip South America, a area inhabited by human beings. The Chileans were and are, in my estimation, more sensitive to the public health aspects of increasing surface ultraviolet radiation. This part of the world tends to be very cloudy and it is cool all year long with cold winters and cool summers. No one learns to swim because the water is so cold you die in ten minutes or so. A quick but fairly thorough 6 week study of this area was done in November 1992 by medical and veterinary scientists using mostly existing local medical records for the human health aspect and surveys of animals on estancias around Punta Arenas and on Tierra del Fuego. The study was published in April 1995 in The American Journal of Public Health. It found no acute human or animal effects from the increased ultraviolet radiation that had been measured on the area since 1992 and implied from satellite images from the late 1970s.
The so called Johns Hopkins Study is worth reading since it called for increased surveillance of the area if UV radiation stayed the same or if it increased. It increased but no such follow up studies were ever done.The study also raised, as far as I am concerned serious questions about the rate of squamous cell carcinoma in Hereford cattle and the incidence of cataract formation in cattle (It only considered blinding cataracts as worthy of being considered an "acute" effect)
The local people in Region XII or Chile, Magallanes, about 150,000 people in an area one third the size of Italy, struggled with recognizing they have a problem and established a public health educational and advisory program that has been in effect for the past two or three years. What convinced them was the unprecedented and unexpected sunburns that many people suffered during the springtime. The sun doesn't come out much here, but it does once in a while and kids play in the yard and it sometimes gets warm enough to take off the warm jackets that everyone wears.
In the meantime, during the 1990 it was recognized that the Arctic Vortex was stabilizing and cooling producing conditions that lowered the temperature of the stratosphere to the point that heterogeneous chemistry could occur. Which is what happened. So we now basically had a second "Ozone Hole" that had formed in an area close to where millions of light skinned people live and where snow and ice in the spring have the capacity to greatly increase the reflectance of ultraviolet light, and reflect it right into the face and eyes. Think of those slit sun glasses the northern people evolved to protect their eyes from reflected sun on the polar ice.
It is now widely accepted that the warming of the planet * plus regular ozone depletion has led to the further cooling of the stratosphere, which, even though the amount of chlorine in the atmosphere is declining, will further worsen ozone depletion. Scientists tend to use the word "recovery" to describe the hypothetical situation where the ozone layer will return to levels that existed around 1980.
I believe this is wishful thinking and harmful. The only estimate made so far of UV levels **"before the recovery begins", or "before the recovery is detected' are for doubling of levels above 60 North and South over the next 20 years or so.There has been no (NO) discussion of what environmental effects might result. It should be noted that all estimates show the southern hemisphere worse off than the north.
If one looks at a globe one sees that the earth is very different at both poles. The north has a frozen (for the time being) sea surrounded by a huge land mass. The south has a land mass loaded with a mountain of ice surrounded by a vast ocean, the great Southern Ocean. The only land from 45S is the tip of South America, the so called "Southern Cone with maybe 250,000 people. Looking at the other end of the globe one sees that a vast portion of the developed world is encompassed in that area of the north.
Considering the estimates that the worst ozone depletion will take place above 60 N and S, that still leaves a large part of Scandinavia, Russia, Canada and Alaska with in the area---and keeping in mind that nature never follows the abstract lines of latitude like 60 , or any other human abstraction. No one, but a few scientists "live" poleward of 60 S, but as we can observe the Antarctic Ozone Hole has passed over the tip of South America many, many times during the 1990s.
1999 was a terrible year and, just to take one example which I happen to have available, comparing November 11, 1999 when there were 324.6 DUs measured over Punta Arenas. On Nov 21, 1999 205.5 DUs were measured, a -37% depletion.UVB in the range of 294-298 nm went up 680% (1.88 to 14.59 mW/cm2) and wavelengths 300-305 nm went up by 160%--this particular range causing the most skin damage and also thought to be the most disruptive to human and plant DNA, and therefore carcinogenic.
There has been a lot of talk about just exactly what these levels mean to humans although there had been little talk about what these levels mean to terrestrial life. Is receiving levels of UVB at high latitude during the spring the same as receiving similar levels in the tropics or at mid latitude during the summer?
It seems to me at times as if Roman or Greek logicians would be comfortable with this kind of non empirical argumentation. The US Polar Research Program is doing great work, on a long term basis, studying the ecology of the Southern Ocean. There is little doubt that increased UV influences the plants and animals that live in that immense area of the globe. But that area is remote and far from most human concerns.
there is no doubt in my mind that Scandinavian scientists, and others across high northern latitudes are very concerned about ozone depletion and rising levels of UVB. Someone asked a very good question: "Where is the evidence of the increase of human skin cancers due to "ozone hole"? "
A friend of mine, Dr Jaime Abarca is in the final stages of preparing his paper on skin cancer related to UVB levels and the Antarctic Ozone Hole. The questioner must know that skin cancers are related to many things, including heredity, occupation and life style, income,sex, smoking and also latitude. Lifetime exposure to solar light is correlated with the two most common forms of skin cancers while the third common cancer, melanoma, a very deadly cancer, seems to be correlated with intermittent, intense exposure.
They take years to develop. I've seen the data. I'm not a Dermatologist. The number of cases is not huge, but to me it is all there is since no one but my friend is looking. He gets support from no one except his patients that he treats during the day. He works all day and does his science at night, very late at night. He types his own papers, he pays for his own computers and support. He doesn't get a peso from anyone, no one! Does this suroprise you? Have any of you ever gone out and asked a question of nature? How high are those clouds
got to go battery runningout and notimeto spell check.,
Spell Checked and Posted....