Originally posted by: Dogma420
hey, how about catalytic converters converting pollution to water as a by-product, over theoretically a million years, would this create flooding? I guess a stupid question....but does anyone know?
I think it would take a lot longer then a million years to make a difference, probably several billion...
Plus I don't think that's what the by product of catalytic converters. Water vapor is produced as a natural by product of the combustion chamber.
Anyways less then .5% of the total water on earth is aviable to us at usable fresh water.
And out of that tiny percent comes another tiny percent of what we actually use and another tiny percent of that is what we keep inside our bodies and containers.
As humans our perceptions of the world are realy messed up. For instance I live close to one of the largest rivers in the world. The Mississippi river, and as far as rivers go it is pretty gigantic. Over a mile wide in the lower states, and in it's natural meandering (and very destructive) form it would get up to 2-3 or so miles in width.
And that's just the run off. A tiny part of the river is actually what you see as the "river" part. The part you can drown in. That's just the tip of the iceburg and the vast majority of it is underground; extending 20 miles or so in either direction, easy. The flowing water you see is just the runoff.
We all are very very tiny. It takes billions of us to just begin to make a noticable impact on the world, and that impact is dwarfed by the natural forces surrounding us.
We can easily scum up the small layer of this earth that we exist on and around, but that doesn't compare against the absolute massiveness of everything around us.
For instance the one explosion of Mt Saint Helens a few years back spewed out more dangerous chemicals and greenhouse gasses (It varies to the type of gass/chemical of course) then the entire human race has since before the industrial revolution. And that volcanic explotion is again tiny in size to some we've seen in the historical record.
So even if we made a unified effort to bottle water or store it in gigantic containers it would be years and years of work until you could positively measure the difference in the climate by even hundreds of a percent. And that would be again dwarfed by the natural variations in the heat/radiation output by our sun and our naturally varying climate.