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Global Biogeochemical Cycles in the Climate System
Ist Teil von
Academic Press, Inc., 525 B St. Ste. 1900 San Diego CA 92101-4495 USA. 350 pp. 2001, 2001, p.350-350
Ort / Verlag
United States: Elsevier Science & Technology
Erscheinungsjahr
2001
Beschreibungen/Notizen
In the late 20th century, biogeochemistry emerged as a new discipline in which the biological, physical, and human sciences collaborate (CGCR, 1999; Schlesinger, 1997). Biological, because the chemical cycles of the planet are mediated by life. Physical, because of the strong coupling between climate and atmospheric composition so evident in the glacial-interglacial record of the ice cores. And, human, because of the massive human disruption of the planet's carbon and nitrogen cycles by fossil fuel burning (which produces CO sub(2) and a range of volatile nitrogen compounds). From the three figures, one gets an overview of the way in which the field of biogeochemistry has emerged. The evidence for the importance of biology in the composition of the atmosphere was deduced from geochemical measurements of air enabled by advances in analytical technology. The chemistry of the atmosphere and the discipline of atmospheric chemistry provided a view of the biosphere not accessible from "within" the discipline. The atmosphere reflects biotic processes operating over "deep" time as well as processes operating on rapid time scales (especially with respect to the oxidized N species). Some compounds, especially the hydrocarbons, may reflect plant--insect coevolution, and so to understand the atmosphere requires a deep understanding of biology. When insights into atmospheric chemistry were combined with emerging ecosystem studies of nitrogen and other elements (e.g., Vitousek and Reiners, 1977), a paradigm emerged that enriched both ecology and geophysics (Andreae and Schimel, 1989).