
Sandvox was the choice for Gene R. H. Fry to build his website. He chose the “Cirrus” design for the site. People may want to visit the site if they are looking for global warming.
Visit Global Warming - So What? »

Describe your website.
Earth's climate has been changing for hundreds of millions of years. But human carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions are warming it faster than ever. Sulfur aerosols and thawing permafrost - as well as black soot and changes in solar output and clouds - are other significant factors. So are land use changes and other greenhouse gas emissions.
Data sets available here describe many aspects of climate change, such as temperatures, ice loss, drought severity, CO2 emissions, food supplies, and sea level change.
Articles are grouped into 18 pages, for subjects including
Warm & Cool (Earth's temperature history over millions of years, and causal factors like clouds and sulfates, plus °C sensitivity to doubled CO2);
Ice (ice flow dynamics, vanishing ice on the Arctic Ocean and Greenland, and changes in East Antarctica; etc.);
Water (groundwater loss in California, India, China & Texas; hurricanes; fading lakes; etc.);
No Water (widespread once-a-century droughts in the past decade, with declining soil moisture and more wildfires, plus desertification);
Carbon Sinks & Sources (thawing permafrost and methane hydrates; carbon sequestration in soils (Savory's Holistic Management), rocks (Lackner et al.) and seas (Planktos, etc.);
Food Impacts (heat and lower soil moisture (and flood) damages partly offset by CO2 fertilization, large food price increases over last 6 years, etc.);
Bio-Impacts (spreading diseases, longer growing seasons, range shifts, population declines, etc.);
Sea Level (1-7 feet this century, 8 feet per century 10,000 years ago), Flood & Weather Impacts (more extremes, the "new normal", jet stream changes, longer droughts and rains, etc.);
Costs, Wars & Disasters, etc. (tens of trillions of dollars, from real estate lost to sea, diseases, water wars, progressive food shortages, etc.);
Energy from Coal (retirements, pollution, stock prices), Oil, Gas, & Nukes (anti-renaissance);
Renewable Energy (wind, solar, etc.; 80% of US electricity by 2050, etc.);
Energy Use (Vehicles - EVs and MPG - Buildings, Lights, etc.);
Government and Climate Change (pricing carbon, EPA and Court rulings, politics, World Bank, IPCC, National Climate Assessment, etc.); and
Other (Geo-engineering, economics, investors, insurance, emissions, evangelical scientists, AAAS, etc.)
Who is the target audience for your website?
My audience would be educated people who want to learn more about climate change. Many are skeptical that it is happening, than humans have much to do with it, that it is happening very fast, that its effects are mostly bad. Some will think it costs too much to do anything about it, or that action to slow climate change (or global warming) is futile.
What is the advantage of your website over others?
It has an unparalleled library of more than 2,000 articles about climate change. It also has a wider array of graphs about global warming and climate change than any other website I've seen.
Why did you use this Sandvox design?
It was as close to blank as I could get.
www.SandvoxSites.com/2845