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Related: About this forumUArizona's Biosphere 2: A look at three decades of climate research
ORACLE, Ariz. (KVOA) - Just about an hour out of Tucson is the world's largest controlled environment dedicated to understanding the impacts of climate change.
We're talking about the University of Arizona's Biosphere 2.
A two-year project inside Biosphere 2 that started in 1991, captured headlines around the world. While that experiment ended in 1993, the research at Biosphere 2 has continued through the years.
Biosphere 2 is 3.14 acres of science. Inside, human made ecosystems, dedicated to helping us understand the future of our planet.
A world within walls, where habitats grow and research thrives, built to better understand how our Earth operates.
We're talking about the University of Arizona's Biosphere 2.
A two-year project inside Biosphere 2 that started in 1991, captured headlines around the world. While that experiment ended in 1993, the research at Biosphere 2 has continued through the years.
Biosphere 2 is 3.14 acres of science. Inside, human made ecosystems, dedicated to helping us understand the future of our planet.
A world within walls, where habitats grow and research thrives, built to better understand how our Earth operates.
If you'd like to learn more about the research at Biosphere 2 or how to visit, you can click here.
https://www.kvoa.com/news/arizona/uarizonas-biosphere-2-a-look-at-three-decades-of-climate-research/article_b5840eec-ea31-11ee-a9dc-4706970a1f48.html
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UArizona's Biosphere 2: A look at three decades of climate research (Original Post)
Ptah
Mar 2024
OP
hunter
(38,924 posts)1. It's pretty much punctured the idea of closed ecosystems in outer space.
If we are ever so foolish as to build human outposts on Mars they'll be more like a submarines than greenhouse gardens.
Maintaining robust human habitable micro-ecosystems is going to be much more difficult than we thought.
2naSalit
(92,669 posts)2. And for some reason...
So many still think our species could live for any length of time anywhere but on this planet. Billions of $ are spent on this idea when it could have been used for betterment of our situation here. In the end, we're not going to survive in physical form.
mike_c
(36,332 posts)3. I visited in the late 90s
I was part of a delegation visiting to explore research collaborations with what is now Cal Poly Humboldt. Nothing ever came of the collaboration, but it was a fascinating site visit. That would have been in 1997 or '98, I think.