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Terrestrial vegetation is becoming more luxuriant.
That fact that since the mid 50s we have witnessed
a process hereto unknown to man is something which by now
is understood and increasingly analysed. Important scientists
that work in the field of research on climate and on the
environment have called
the period of the history of
Earth corresponding to the modern age of the history of the man
“anthropocene” (from the Greek "anthropos"). The idea is that
from the beginning of the industrial era, some changes in wind
patterns, in
meteorological phenomena and in cloud coverage
have influenced the general state of the atmosphere, the
flow of oceans, ice coverage and
desertification; these same factors are important for the
growth of plants
and the evolution of
ecosystems. If this process,
and its effects, is yet to be understood and therefore to be
documented, it is also true
that the various phenomena which have been manifested cause more
than few worries
internationally. Phenomena such as
desertification, the loss of fertility of various regions of the
planet, the climatic changes and so on, represent aspects which
are complex to understood
and
even more complex to resolve. Yet behind so much alarming
news, perhaps something new is starting to take shape on the
horizon. The news, apparently against the trend, comes directly
from NASA. The
American Space agency has recently published some news that
seems worth while to divulge. Research, conducted by a team of
NASA researchers, has shown that for about twenty years in some
regions of our planet the vegetation is becoming more and more
luxuriant, while in others the desert advances.

From the analysis of the data gathered by some satellites in orbit
around our planet, a team of NASA researchers
led by Dr. Liming Zhou of the University of Boston has
discovered that the vegetation of some northern terrestrial
regions seems to be becoming more and more luxuriant. This
process, which began in the early eighties, is slowly continuing
year after year, affecting in particular the northern latitudes,
from
40 degrees upwards. What is the cause of all this? " The
increase of the temperature of the planet and the extension of
the warm seasons probably plays a fundamental role”, affirms Liming Zhou. “We have found, in fact, a close
relationship between the average thermal increase of the planet
and that of vegetation". In reality the green areas have not
extended but, rather, they have thickened, especially in Central
Europe and in Asia (from Siberia to the extreme eastern regions
of Russia). This conclusion has been reached after having
analyzed the data collected by the Global Historical Climate
Network that consists of thousands of meteorological stations
distributed on the whole surface of the planet. Dr. James Hansen
from NASA’s Goddard Institute on
Space Studies in New-York is the person responsible for the
analysis of these data. He has underlined that there is underway
a climatic variation in Europe, Asia and North America, even if
in different terms. In Particular in the
Eurasian continent the warm season has lengthened by
21 days (with the start of Spring
advancing by a week and the start of autumn postponed by 12
days), while in the American continent the summer has lengthened
an average of 12 days. Dr. Ranga Myneni, of the University of
Boston, sustains that the increase in the vegetation can
determine repercussions in the cycle of
carbon dioxide and, therefore, the green house effect.
Carbon Dioxide is, in fact, the principal element responsible
for the thermal increase of the Earth and a
variation in it would have, surely, some consequences for
our climate. This research has just been published in the
September issue of the prestigious international scientific
magazine Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres.
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