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Warming of 2C would release billions of tonnes of soil carbon by Staff Writers Exeter UK (SPX) Nov 03, 2020
Global warming of 2C would lead to about 230 billion tonnes of carbon being released from the world's soil, new research suggests. Global soils contain two to three times more carbon than the atmosphere, and higher temperatures speed up decomposition - reducing the amount of time carbon spends in the soil (known as "soil carbon turnover"). The new international research study, led by the University of Exeter, reveals the sensitivity of soil carbon turnover to global warming and subsequently halves uncertainty about this in future climate change projections. The estimated 230 billion tonnes of carbon released at 2 C warming (above pre-industrial levels) is more than four times the total emissions from China, and more than double the emissions from the USA, over the last 100 years. "Our study rules out the most extreme projections - but nonetheless suggests substantial soil carbon losses due to climate change at only 2 C warming, and this doesn't even include losses of deeper permafrost carbon," said co-author Dr Sarah Chadburn, of the University of Exeter. This effect is a so-called "positive feedback" - when climate change causes knock-on effects that contribute to further climate change. The response of soil carbon to climate change is the greatest area of uncertainty in understanding the carbon cycle in climate change projections. To address this, the researchers used a new combination of observational data and Earth System Models - which simulate the climate and carbon cycle and subsequently make climate change predictions. "We investigated how soil carbon is related to temperature in different locations on Earth to work out its sensitivity to global warming," said lead author Rebecca Varney, of the University of Exeter. State-of-the-art models suggest an uncertainty of about 120 billion tonnes of carbon at 2 C global mean warming. The study reduces this uncertainty to about 50 billion tonnes of carbon. Co-author Professor Peter Cox, of Exeter's Global Systems Institute, said: "We have reduced the uncertainty in this climate change response, which is vital to calculating an accurate global carbon budget and successfully meeting Paris Agreement targets."
Research Report: "A spatial emergent constraint on the sensitivity of soil carbon turnover to global warming"
Rice finds path to nanodiamond from graphene Houston TX (SPX) Nov 02, 2020 Marrying two layers of graphene is an easy route to the blissful formation of nanoscale diamond, but sometimes thicker is better. While it may only take a bit of heat to turn a treated bilayer of the ultrathin material into a cubic lattice of diamane, a bit of pressure in just the right place can convert few-layer graphene as well. The otherwise chemically driven process is theoretically possible according to scientists at Rice University, who published their most recent thoughts on making h ... read more
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