Not exact matches
Despite being cold
enough to be covered in layers of sulphur dioxide frost, this large inner moon of Jupiter is the most
volcanic world known, spitting out 100 times as much lava as all Earth's volcanoes can muster, from a surface
area just 1 / 12th the size.
We do not know
enough to determine under what circumstance CO2 is a forcing or a feedback relative to temperature sometimes it maybe both sometimes over large
areas it may even be a coolant e.g. if you think it is the main driver (which I don't) you would have to say it acted as a coolant for several thousand years from the Holocene climate optimum to the LIA — see Fig 6 in the last post at http://climatesense-norpag.blogspot.com I quoted the end Permian Siberian traps as a possible example of CO2 as a forcing but even here CO2 was rising rapidly before the
volcanic event.