CO2 and Oxygen LevelsAre oxygen levels declining due to increasing CO2 levels?

  • Thread starter Thread starter boomerang
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Levels Oxygen
AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the relationship between increasing CO2 levels and the potential decrease in O2 levels. It highlights the basic chemical reaction involving the combustion of fossil fuels, which produces CO2 and water while consuming O2. The conversation references the IPCC's fourth assessment report, noting that there is a small, measurable decrease in O2 levels that correlates with rising CO2, although this change is challenging to quantify due to the different measurement scales—CO2 is measured in parts per million, while O2 is measured in percentage. Seasonal variations in CO2 levels are also mentioned, with higher concentrations in winter and lower in summer due to increased photosynthesis. The northern hemisphere's greater vegetated land mass is acknowledged as a contributing factor to these seasonal changes.
boomerang
Messages
27
Reaction score
0
This was prompted by another thread which got me thinking.

If CO2 levels are increasing then surely O2 levels must be decreasing?

I mean I am just going by basic chemistry, we have hydrocarbons (fossil fuels) where
are being burnt and I believe the basic formula is:-

Hydrogen and Carbon (from fossil fuels) + O2 (from atmosphere)= CO2 + H20.

So it would seem to a 'layman' like me that if CO2 is increasing then O2 must be decreasing?

The only source of O2 that I am aware of is plants, but I believe they have to take CO2
out of the atmosphere to make O2, so if CO2 is increasing then O2 (oxygen) must be decreasing?

I did a bit of chemistry so I think that is right.
 
Earth sciences news on Phys.org
boomerang said:
This was prompted by another thread which got me thinking.

If CO2 levels are increasing then surely O2 levels must be decreasing?

I remember having read such an observation somewhere in the 4th assesment report of the IPCC (physical basis blah blah). One sees indeed a small decrease in O2 levels qualitatively in correlation with the CO2 rise, although it is at the limit of what is measurable.
 
Ie, remember that CO2 concentration is measured in parts per million while O2 is measured in percent.
 
russ_watters said:
Ie, remember that CO2 concentration is measured in parts per million while O2 is measured in percent.

Yes, that's why this observation was so difficult...
 
CO_2 concetrations vary from winter to summer in a given year - peaking in winter; lower in summer due to increased photosynthesis during spring and summer.

Due in part to the northern hemisphere has more vegetated land mass than does the southern hemisphere.

FWIW.
 
Thread 'The Secrets of Prof. Verschure's Rosetta Stones'
(Edit: since the thread title was changed, this first sentence is too cryptic: the original title referred to a Tool song....) Besides being a favorite song by a favorite band, the thread title is a straightforward play on words. This summer, as a present to myself for being promoted, I purchased a collection of thin sections that I believe comprise the research materials of Prof. Rob Verschure, who at the time was faculty in the Geological Institute in Amsterdam. What changed this...
These last days, there is a seemingly endless cluster of rather powerful earthquakes close to the islands of Santorini, Amorgos, Anafi, and Ios. Remember, this is a highly volcanically active region, Santorini especially being famous for the supervolcanic eruption which is conjectured to have led to the decline of the Minoan civilization: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minoan_eruption To grasp the scale of what is happening, between the 26th of January and the 9th of February, 12000...
Back
Top