Carbon Cycle
What is the Earth's Carbon cycle?
Carbon is the building block of life. Without it, there would be no organic
chemistry, and therefore no life as we know it.
How does it work?
Even though Carbon is fundamentally important to life on Earth, it isn't
exactly one of the most abundant elements on the planet. Life, therefore, has
developed an intricate system which pumps the limited resource from one reservoir
to another. Carbon is exchanged between the atmosphere and the biosphere largely
through the the plant processes of transpiration and respiration - animals get
their supply of carbon from eating autotrophic plants. When plants and animals
die the Carbon they have assimilated ends up getting buried in the lithosphere
either directly as is the case with terrestrial organisms, or via the water
cycle as with aquatic life. Eventually the buried Carbon will reenter the atmosphere
via outgassing from a volcano, or more recently through the burning of fossil
fuels (which can be thought of as the carbon from million year old dead organisms).
Some carbon also leaves the land directly due to land cover type changes, such
as that from a forest to an agricultural field.
The human factor
The human induced changes in the Carbon cycle - land use change, and fossil
fuel burning - are at the forefront of today's climate change debate. Carbon
Dioxide is a product of both deforestation and fossil fuel burning, and humans
have been spewing it into the atmosphere at an alarming rate since the dawn
of the industrial revolution. All of this extra Carbon Dioxide in the atmosphere
acts to thicken the insulating blanket surrounding the Earth,
and increase its temperature. This increase in temperature is only the beginning
of the problem, as changing temperature regimes will lead to changes in precipitation,
and eventually total shifts in the location of the worlds ecosystems. World
leaders are beginning to understand the consequences of climate change and have
begun developing methods of curbing it, the Kyoto protocol is one example of
such legislation.
Artwork by Maija Swanson and Nick Olejniczak


