04759nam 22007214a 450 991082555030332120200520144314.01-55963-202-X1-55963-527-41-61091-075-31-59726-877-11-4175-3912-7(CKB)1000000000003346(EBL)3317338(OCoLC)56418879(SSID)ssj0000163202(PQKBManifestationID)11170095(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000163202(PQKBWorkID)10105859(PQKB)10247160(MiAaPQ)EBC3317338(Au-PeEL)EBL3317338(CaPaEBR)ebr10064684(EXLCZ)99100000000000334620031112d2004 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrThe global carbon cycle integrating humans, climate, and the natural world /edited by Christopher B. Field and Michael R. Raupach1st ed.Washington Island Pressc20041 online resource (560 p.)SCOPE ;62Description based upon print version of record.1-55963-201-1 1-55963-526-6 Includes bibliographical references and index.About Island Press/ SCOPE; SCOPE Series Page; Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; List of Colorplates, Figures, Tables, Boxes, and Appendixes; Colorplates; Foreword; Ackowledgments; Ch 1: The Global Carbon Cycle: Integrating Humans, Climate, and the Natural World; Part I: Crosscutting Issues; Ch 2: Current Status and Past Trends of the Global Carbon Cycle; Ch 3: The Vulnerability of the Carbon Cycle in the 21st Century: An Assessment of Carbon-Climate-Human Interactions; Ch 4: Scenarios, Targets, Gaps, and Costs; Ch 5: A Portfolio of Carbon Management OptionsCh 6: Interactions between CO2 Stabilization Pathways and Requirements for a Sustainable Earth SystemPart II: Overview of the Carbon Cycle; Ch 7: A Paleo-Perspective on Changes in Atmospheric CO2 and Climate; Ch 8: Spatial and Temporal Distribution of Sources and Sinks of Carbon Dioxide; Ch 9: Non-CO2 Greenhouse Gases; Ch 10: Climate--Carbon Cycle Interactions; Ch 11: Socioeconomic Driving Forces of Emissions Scenarios; Part III: The Carbon Cycle of the Oceans; Ch 12: Natural Processes Regulationg the Ocean Uptake of CO2Ch 13: Variability and Climate Feedback Mechanisms in Ocean Uptake of CO2Part IV: The Carbon Cycle of the Land; Ch 14: A Primer on the Terrestrial Carbon Cycle: What We Don't Know But Should; Ch 15: Geographic and Temporal Variation of Carbon Exchange by Ecosystems and Their Sensitivity to Environmnetla Perturbation; Ch 16: Current Consequences of Past Actions: How to Separate Direct from Indirect; Part V: The Carbo Cycle of Land--Ocean Margins; Ch 17: Pathways of Atmospheric CO2 through Fluvual Systems; Ch 18: Exchanges of Carbon in the Coastal Seas; Part VI: Humans and the Carbon CycleCh 19: Pathwaysof the Regional Development and the Carbon CycleCh 20: Social Change and CO2 Stabilization: Moving away from the Carbon Cultures; Ch 21: Carbon Transport through International Commerce; Part VII: Purposeful Carbon Management; Ch 22: Near- and Long-Term Climate Change Mitigation Potential; Ch 23: Unanticipated Consequences: Thinking about Ancillary Benefits and Costs of Greenhouse Gas Emissions Mitigation; Ch 24: International Policy Framework on Climate Change: Sinks in Recent International Agreements; Ch 25: A Multi-Gas Approach to Climate PolicyCh 26: Storage of Carbon Dioxide by Greening the Oceans?Ch 27: Direct Injection of CO2 in the Ocean; Ch 28: Engineered Biological Sinks on Land; Ch 29: Abatement of Nitrous Oxide, Methane, and the Other Non-CO2 Greenhouse Gases: The Need for a Systems Approach; List of Contributors; SCOPE Series List; SCOPE Executive Committee 2001-2004; Index; Island Press Board of DirectorsSCOPE report ;62.Atmospheric carbon dioxideCarbon cycle (Biogeochemistry)Greenhouse gas mitigationNatureEffect of human beings onAtmospheric carbon dioxide.Carbon cycle (Biogeochemistry)Greenhouse gas mitigation.NatureEffect of human beings on.363.738/746Field Christopher B1613829Raupach M. R(Michael R.)1613830MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910825550303321The global carbon cycle4188034UNINA