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ecological effects of acid rain. Could they be connected to other two important ecological issues like “climate change” and “depletion of ozone layer”?

2007-04-25 03:20:41 · 2 answers · asked by glammagurl1 1 in Environment

2 answers

acid rain has 'killed' all the high elevation lakes in the Anarondaks. A tour guide pointed out that it is not natural for lakes to be so clear, it indicates there is no microscopic life in the lake. This is the case with lots of mountain lakes (how sad).

Acid rain is not the cause of global warming or depletion of the ozone layer, it's simply another sad result of using fossil fuels.

2007-04-25 05:39:16 · answer #1 · answered by Fancy That 6 · 0 0

It has nothing to do with ozone layer problems .The ozone layer is so high u couldn't bother it if u wanted to. It is at the very edge of space and nothing gets that outside of some very light gases like Hydrogen.
Acid rain is a Minor problem and if it gets to the lake through a river it will be neutralized by the time it gets there. Most rocks and earth are basic so it will neutralize it very quickly.

2007-04-25 03:40:26 · answer #2 · answered by JOHNNIE B 7 · 0 0

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