level 13
九十钩圈凯_
楼主
water contributes to global warming and the "Greenhouse Effect", and is one of the so-called "greenhouse gasses".
water is an "enabling component" of acid rain -- in the absence of sufficient quantities of water, acid rain is not a problem
water is a causative agent in most instances of soil erosion -- sufficiently high levels of water exacerbate the negative effects of soil erosion
water is present in high levels nearly every creek, stream, pond, river, lake and reservoir in the U.S. and around the world
Measurable levels of water have been verified in ice samples taken from both the Arctic and Antarctic ice caps
Recent massive water exposures have lead to the loss of life and destruction of property in California, the Mid-West, the Philippines, and a number of islands in the Caribbean, to name just a few.
Research has shown that significant levels of water were found in the devastating Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004 which killed 230,000 in Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia and elsewhere, making it the deadliest tsunami in recorded history.
It is widely believed that the levee failures, flooding and the widespread destruction resulting from Hurricane Katrina along the U.S. Gulf Coast in 2005 were caused or exacerbated by excessive water levels found in the Gulf of Mexico, along with other contributing factors.
2015年08月02日 12点08分
1
water is an "enabling component" of acid rain -- in the absence of sufficient quantities of water, acid rain is not a problem
water is a causative agent in most instances of soil erosion -- sufficiently high levels of water exacerbate the negative effects of soil erosion
water is present in high levels nearly every creek, stream, pond, river, lake and reservoir in the U.S. and around the world
Measurable levels of water have been verified in ice samples taken from both the Arctic and Antarctic ice caps
Recent massive water exposures have lead to the loss of life and destruction of property in California, the Mid-West, the Philippines, and a number of islands in the Caribbean, to name just a few.
Research has shown that significant levels of water were found in the devastating Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004 which killed 230,000 in Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia and elsewhere, making it the deadliest tsunami in recorded history.
It is widely believed that the levee failures, flooding and the widespread destruction resulting from Hurricane Katrina along the U.S. Gulf Coast in 2005 were caused or exacerbated by excessive water levels found in the Gulf of Mexico, along with other contributing factors.


