Previous Page  6 / 7 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 6 / 7 Next Page
Page Background

Volume 8, Issue 8 (Suppl)

J Earth Sci Clim Change

ISSN: 2157-7617 JESCC, an open access journal

Earth Science Congress 2017

September 18-19, 2017

Page 17

Notes:

conference

series

.com

September 18-19, 2017 Hong Kong

6

th

International Conference on

Earth Science and Climate Change

Ozone holes

T

he writers prove that the generation of ozone is an effect (not the cause) of ultraviolet adsorption. Variations in the ozone

concentration in the Earth’s atmosphere are attributed to the natural forces and not anthropogenic activities. The ozone

holes, is a good example of a pseudoscientific problem which was invented for the public. The adsorption of solar UVR occurs

due to dissociation of oxygen and nitrogen molecules to a ton. Unfortunately, anthropogenic causes were blamed for the

formation and evolution of ozone holes. Refrigeration industry and aerosol canned products, using the easily liquefiable frozen

gas were blamed, without any verification. For example, why the most widespread and deepest ozone holes are observed

in Southern Hemisphere (Antarctica)? whereas the maximal anthropogenic Freon gas emissions occur in the Northern

Hemisphere. Refrigeration industry also should have asked the following question: How about natural ozone being emitted in

huge quantities (several orders of magnitude higher than anthropogenic) into the atmosphere as a result of volcano eruptions

over the subduction ozone of the oceanic tectonic plates? In conclusion, similar to the fight with the anthropogenic greenhouse

gases emission, the problem of the ozone holes is not real.

Biography

George Chilingar is an American-Armenian Professor of Civil and Petroleum Engineering at the University of Southern California (USC). He has received his

Bachelor’s degree and Master’s degree in Petroleum Engineering and PhD in Geology, all at USC. He has published 72 books and over 500 articles on geology,

petroleum engineering and environmental engineering.

Gchiling@usc.edu

George Chilingar

University of Southern California, USA

George Chilingar, J Earth Sci Clim Change 2017, 8:8 (Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2157-7617-C1-029