Originally posted by dmlfarmer
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Where did you possibly derive the 100 ppm figure from?
You do realize that below 150 ppm photosynthesis stops, the food chain collapses and life on earth goes extinct? Spoiler alert, that didn't actually occur, as evidenced by the continued existence of life on earth today.
I only bring this up to support the statement that current levels are so close to the lowest in history that it falls within the margin of error.
I assume you read the above graph and guessed at the 100 ppm. And because the graph goes up to 8000 ppm to include the full range of concentrations over 600 million years, it is impossible to detect a difference of a even few hundred ppm, as evidenced by your 100 ppm guess. Data from stomata of fossilized leaves indicates Miocene CO2 levels fluctuated between 3 to 7 times more than your estimate throughout the epoch.
The difference between todays near starvation levels of CO2, and the actual starvation levels at the height of the last ice age equates to only 3% of the total 7000 ppm range of CO2 levels over the past 600 million years. In other words, we are only 3% higher than the lowest level since life began, compared to the highest level. That difference is undetectable on a linear graph, as you were kind enough to point out for us.
When are you going to take my advice and have your BS detector recalibrated? It seems to be working completely opposite to how it is supposed to.
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