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The earth has an elegant cycle of life.
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It's the story of carbon.
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And over billions of years, it has evolved to look something like this.
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It starts with a plant.
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Plants and microorganisms absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
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Then they use energy from the sun to convert that carbon into oxygen and sugar, which they use to grow.
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And as they grow, they emit some carbon back into the atmosphere.
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But all plants eventually die.
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And some are consumed by bacteria, others by larger beasts.
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These animals eat plants for energy.
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And they breathe out carbon.
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But eventually, those animals die, too.
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And they end up in the ground.
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Meanwhile, a similar thing happens in the ocean.
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Coral and plankton need carbon from the water to survive.
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Luckily, the ocean has carbon because it absorbs some from the atmosphere.
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And, when rain falls to the earth, it grabs some carbon from the atmosphere and from rocks.
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And flows into the ocean, where the coral and plankton use carbon to grow.
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Or other animals use it to grow.
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But just like animals, the coral and plankton die, too.
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In short, all living things are made of carbon, and they eventually end up in the ground.
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Some of that carbon will eventually get back to the atmosphere.
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But some of it normally stays in the ground.
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Usually, dead things decay and turn into rocks.
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Eventually, they're crushed, and extreme heat and pressure causes them to melt and emit the carbon, which is trapped underground.
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Over time, that trapped carbon eventually escapes into the atmosphere when volcanoes erupt.
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And the cycle starts again.
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But occasionally, dead plants and animals don't turn into rock.
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They don't decay fast enough, so they turn into oil, coal, or natural gas.
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This carbon gets stuck in the ground.
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This is the elegant system that keeps carbon cycling through Earth at a steady pace.
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Carbon in the atmosphere keeps some heat from leaving Earth.
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It keeps Earth at a stable temperature.
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But very recently, one of these animals started to dig up the carbon in the ground.
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They took the carbon that was stuck in the ground and put it back into the atmosphere.
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They did this so much, in such a short time span, that this cycle was disrupted.
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Too much carbon was being put into the atmosphere.
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Heat that would normally be able to escape bounced back and stayed on Earth.
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And Earth started to get warmer and warmer.
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Really recently, just a few months ago, more than 100 bipedal scientists said they might only have 12 years to stop a disastrous amount of warming.
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So these animals not only need to stop putting carbon in the atmosphere, but also get carbon out of the atmosphere.
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They found that one way to remove carbon is to grow more plants.
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They could stop cutting down trees.
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Or raise livestock in ways that help restore grass.
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Another way is to let plants suck up carbon from the atmosphere but then burn them for energy.
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And then trapping the carbon they emit underground.
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They could also build machines to suck air from the atmosphere and filter out the carbon.
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But they haven't figured out how to do this fast enough.
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There are many ways these animals can tweak this cycle to suck carbon out of the atmosphere.
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A combination of them is probably the best way forward.
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But, first, these animals need to figure out how to stop putting it there in the first place.