NO
Global warming has nothing to do with the so-called Ozone hole...
Animal species are constantly becoming 'extinct', rediscovered, and/or discovered. It's all part of the cycle of life. Live with it.
As for global warming,
Here is truth about global warming:
Global warming is one-half of the climatic cycle of warming and cooling.
The earth's mean temperature cycles around the freezing point of water.
This is a completely natural phenomenon which has been going on since there has been water on this planet. It is driven by the sun.
Our planet is currently emerging from a 'mini ice age', so is
becoming warmer and may return to the point at which Greenland is again usable as farmland (as it has been in recorded history).
As the polar ice caps decrease, the amount of fresh water mixing with oceanic water will slow and perhaps stop the thermohaline cycle (the oceanic heat 'conveyor' which, among other things, keeps the U.S. east coast warm).
When this cycle slows/stops, the planet will cool again and begin to enter another ice age.
It's been happening for millions of years.
The worrisome and brutal predictions of drastic climate effects are based on computer models, NOT CLIMATE HISTORY.
As you probably know, computer models are not the most reliable of sources, especially when used to 'predict' chaotic systems such as weather.
Global warming/cooling, AKA 'climate change':
Humans did not cause it.
Humans cannot stop it.
2007-12-10 00:53:07
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answer #1
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answered by credo quia est absurdum 7
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It is difficult to answer your question as written, I'm not sure what you mean. To you mean thicker like gravy or thicker like a longer distance before a rocket "leaves the atmosphere". The additional heat will cause the atmosphere to expand a tiny, little bit but it will have no effect at all on the ozone. Ozone Depletion contributes to Global Warming, not the other way around. On the other hand, "smog days" are going to become a lot more frequent; so in a way it's getting thicker like gravy, too. But once again the pollution contributes to Global Warming, not the other way around. .
2016-05-22 11:19:42
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answer #2
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answered by ? 3
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150 million years ago the earth was formed and void with little oxygen. Were talking evolution that has taken time over the years to form and create an envrionment that was liveable for all species and now we are destroying what has taken over 100 million years to build.
A meteor planet the size of earth crashed into our planet and destroyed everything, but then as we see it no life on the ground on earth was alive. The only life would've been in the water and from that evolution began.
This is where science and religion battle the conflicting evidence as to God's creation and evolution of man through time.
Were talking about a billion years ago for evolution to create such monsters that roamed the earth and the creation of man as an amphibian and we just crawl out of the water and eventually grow arms and such or as the tad pole that lives in water and then crawls out of the water and breathes on land to become the frog.
Somehow we may never know for sure and I believe that most of the answers lay deep beneath the earth or underneath the ocean floors.
The fact we are here and emerged as human beings leads me to believe that history will once again repeat itself unless we can sustain what is here alread that has taken 4.4 billion years to create.
That's a long time and I won't be alive to see it happen, but I will say this what ever happen 4 billion years ago is simply a miracle of life and God has the answer and know of that, but what lay's ahead of us as we destroy the ozone layer is nothing, but devastation of our earth and life will no longer be able to breathe and we all will die.
2007-12-10 01:29:11
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answer #3
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answered by bigapple 3
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The use of chlorofluorocarbons (cfc's, e.g. freon as a refrigerant and spray-can propellant) has contributed to both ozone depletion and global warming. The Montreal Protocol, signed by most countries during the late 1980s, led to stabilization or reduction of atmospheric concentration of many cfc's (see source below). But the most common greenhouse gases, carbon dioxide and methane, have little impact on the ozone layer.
As the climate warms, many species of animals will be affected and will be forced to either adapt or migrate in order to survive.
2007-12-10 01:47:05
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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I will give you a site that deals with that but the answer is yes, because it enables some species to invade areas where they are not normally found and destroy native species necessary in that area and destroys the living conditions of others. While many deny global warming, this is a group of scientists from virtually every country in the world looking at the facts and reporting what they find rather than a group mouthing what many would like to believe or what some have read and are merely repeating. for example, scientists in Michigan do not want you to believe in global warming or it will hurt their pocket book when you buy a more efficient fuel car from somewhere else and those with money invested, for example, in industries using coal do not want you buiying less coal. check out this site and you wil see for yourself what these men have found and remember that they are more objective than scientists who need to write a paper in order to make their name more notable and therefore able to make more money in their pockets.
2007-12-10 01:31:42
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answer #5
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answered by Al B 7
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- The Ozone is on its way to being repaired as the harmful products were banned in most countries.
- The animals are not "ours" however global warming is only ONE of a handful of things destroying them...
we take over their habitats and do things to control their numbers (including eating them) every day!
Polar bears are one of the ones commonly linked with dying as a result of Global Warming - when they cannot find ice flows they cannot find food - and have actually drowned becuase they cannot find ice.. beleive it or no there is no LAND in the NORTH POLE (only south pole) so without ice there is no where for them to go...
2007-12-10 02:52:42
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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NO.
You guys confuse me ... I thought the O-zone layer was already destroyed in the 80's by those tiny little bottles of White Out ??? How could there be anything left of the o-zone layer after those toxic little White Out bottles? YIKES.
2007-12-10 00:52:05
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answer #7
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answered by ValleyR 7
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No. The temperature of the atmosphere has little to do with the ozone layer and vice-versa.
2007-12-10 02:47:35
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answer #8
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answered by Dr.T 4
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The depletion of ozone is caused by cold temperatures. There is no evidence that warmer temperatures are harming animals. So no to both
2007-12-10 01:56:47
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answer #9
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answered by espreses@sbcglobal.net 6
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no. One of the compounds we monitor as a pollutant is ozone. the ozone layer may be destroyed by some chemicals that are affeccted by temperature but temperature is not a direct cause
2007-12-10 00:53:35
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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