Matt Lehrer

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By the middle of the nineteenth century, England produced a fifth of global GDP (gross domestic product) and about half of global fossil-fuel emissions. Not surprisingly, global levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide began to rise from about the middle of the nineteenth century. And as early as 1896, the Swedish chemist Svante Arrhenius recognized both that carbon dioxide was a greenhouse gas and that it was being generated in large enough amounts to start changing global climates.
Origin Story: A Big History of Everything
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