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3 pages in length. The main points of Patz's (2005) article entitled "Climate Change" in Frumkin's book Environmental Health illustrate just how vitally intertwined every consequence of global warming is to the continued well being of the planet and all its inhabitants. From food supplies to flooding from changes in sea levels and temperature thresholds to increases in human mortality rates, Patz (2005) clearly identifies the unavoidable domino effect that has begun to transpire as the detrimental climate changes continue to occur from such realities as greenhouse gases. No additional sources cited.
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File: LM1_TLCfrumkin.rtf
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of the planet and all its inhabitants. From food supplies to flooding from changes in sea levels and temperature thresholds to increases in human mortality rates, Patz (2005) clearly
identifies the unavoidable domino effect that has begun to transpire as the detrimental climate changes continue to occur from such realities as greenhouse gases. The potential impacts of climate
change on the health of future human generations and the difficulty of reversing ecosystem changes once they have occurred warrant increased efforts by many scientific and development policy disciplines (Patz,
2005, p. 263). The marked difference between the ability to predict climate changes fifty years from now and doing the same in a five-day forecast is found in the
way the environment has steadily degraded over the years. Patz (2005) illustrates a most obvious indicator is the melting icecaps and how polar bears are becoming stranded on patches
of ice that have broken free from their stable foundation; to analyze this single example is to understand the potential catastrophe the coming fifty years will bring to the planet
as a whole. Coral reefs reflect yet another example of how climate changes can be more accurately predicted than what the weather will be five days from now.
Their "job" as protectors of the sea is being severely threatened as they decline in mass with every passing year. Indeed, Patz (2005) indicates how charting the occurrence of
environmental change is the key to forecasting long-term climate change; while immediate weather patterns typically indicate daily conditions, they are no longer a guarantee of what will occur five days
in the future due to the volatile nature of todays climate fluctuations. As the world continues to succumb to the effects of global
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