Chereads / Tangential / Chapter 7 - Trees and Global Warming (Part 6)

Chapter 7 - Trees and Global Warming (Part 6)

In earlier chapters, we talked about planting trees to help reduce carbon dioxide in the air.

Carbon Dioxide in the air is gaseous. Carbon Dioxide can become a liquid when the environment is cooler or the pressures are higher.

We can find small ponds of shimmering liquid in very deep lakes and the deepest ocean trenches.

However, I encourage everyone to do a little web research on 'exploding lakes'.

A condition where those pools of compressed gases start to bubble. It brings those gases upward and creates eddy flows around pools. The eddy flows create an even greater volume of bubbles. Like I said, 'exploding lakes'.

We could have exploding oceans. A large event causes the pressures at the deepest places to move. The liquid pools start to bubble…

As we talk about sequestration (pumping Carbon Dioxide) deep and far away; we should think about how we are fighting nature. Creating high pressure pockets is simply asking for our holding places to fail.

There should be a good balance and solution of best outcomes available.

As we consider those options, maybe we could plant some trees.