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Old 10-20-2006, 06:59 PM   #15
bluesdave
Getting older every day
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Australia
Posts: 308
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hippikos
NOAA states that the ozone hole was discovered in the 80´s, so take your pick.I´m interested to learn these. CFC and PCB´s are banned for decades, still ozone holes occur, exclusively over the Antarctic.
I stand corrected. The decrease in ozone levels was being hilighted through the 70s and the "hole" actually discovered in the early 80s. It will take at least 50 years for the lost ozone to be replaced, and that is assuming that the developing world does not spew out CFCs and halons.

Here is a quote explaining how the hole occurs:

Why does the ozone hole occur over Antarctica?
Human emissions of CFCs occur mainly in the Northern Hemisphere. Gases such as CFCs which are insoluble in water and relatively unreactive are mixed within a year or two throughout the lower 10 kilometres of the atmosphere (the troposphere). The CFCs then rise from the lower atmosphere into the stratosphere, mainly in the tropics. Winds then move this air poleward - both North and South - from the tropics. The meteorologies of the two polar regions are very different. The South Pole is part of a very large land mass that is completely surrounded by ocean. These conditions produce a very cold stratosphere which leads to the formation of clouds. The clouds that form lead to chemical changes that promote rapid ozone depletion. The North Pole lacks the land/ocean symmetry of the South Pole. As a consequence the stratospheric air is much warmer and fewer clouds form. Therefore the ozone depletion in the Arctic is very much less than in the Antarctic.
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