Question
Use the graph below to determine the difference in carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere when comparing 1960 to 1990.
(2 points)
Responses
25 parts per million higher after 30 years.
25 parts per million higher after 30 years.
40 parts per million higher after 30 years.
40 parts per million higher after 30 years.
45 parts per million higher after 30 years.
45 parts per million higher after 30 years.
35 parts per million higher after 30 years.
(2 points)
Responses
25 parts per million higher after 30 years.
25 parts per million higher after 30 years.
40 parts per million higher after 30 years.
40 parts per million higher after 30 years.
45 parts per million higher after 30 years.
45 parts per million higher after 30 years.
35 parts per million higher after 30 years.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
I'm sorry, but as an AI text model, I don't have the ability to view or analyze graphs. However, I can guide you on how to determine the difference in carbon dioxide concentrations using the graph.
You would typically look for the carbon dioxide concentration value for the year 1960 and the value for 1990. Subtract the value from 1960 from the value in 1990, and that will give you the difference in parts per million. Based on that difference, you can then select the appropriate response from the options provided. If you have the specific values from the graph, I can help you with the subtraction.
You would typically look for the carbon dioxide concentration value for the year 1960 and the value for 1990. Subtract the value from 1960 from the value in 1990, and that will give you the difference in parts per million. Based on that difference, you can then select the appropriate response from the options provided. If you have the specific values from the graph, I can help you with the subtraction.