"If we only listened! few of those familiar with the natural heat exchanges of the atmosphere, which go inti the making of our climate and weather, would be prepared to admit that the activities of man could have any influence on phenomena of so vast a scale. In the following paper i hope to show that such an influence is not only possible but us actually occurring at the present time."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
ConservativesEnvironmentalists from AustraliaWomen born in the 20th centuryWomen activists from AustraliaClimate change activists
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Janice_Lough
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Janice Lough
4 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Janice Lough β
Related Quotes
"While bleaching surveys are ongoing, a distinct pattern is emerging, whereby the severity of bleaching declines from β¦"
"At the start of southern summer it was predicted that bleaching would be largely restricted to central and southern pβ¦"
"We know that global climate is changing due to human actions, climate has changed in the past but not at the current β¦"
"where George II died and where Queen Victoria was born is still used as apartments for the sovereign's relatives: Priβ¦"
"proposed as the chief gardener and William Brown as his assistant. Nelson had already 'sailed round the world in my sβ¦"
"On 1 October 1918, when only sixteen, my father rode into Damascus with the , hours ahead of T.E. Lawrence (Lawrence β¦"
"There is a that I will probably never send. I would not dare to. It is a cross of Jesus drawn in fresh blood from an β¦"
"... In 1961 she trained as a newspaper reporter and was sent to London to work for the Murdoch papers on . She filed β¦"
"One of Australia's least savoury wildlife episodes was the long slaughter of s for their fur, which continued in someβ¦"
"From time to time I get a query about an unusual waterhen people have seen. It's usually described as dark, with red β¦"