Effects of Higher Oxygen Content on living things

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Majin Gojira
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Effects of Higher Oxygen Content on living things

Post by Majin Gojira »

The idea of a human arriving in the Paleozoic era (where, when plants developed) got me to wonder how a higher oxygen content in the atmosphere (30% more IIRC) would effect an organism (humans, to be specific.

So, what would the overal/general effect for the short term? (a few days)

The long term? (years or more)
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Admiral Valdemar
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Post by Admiral Valdemar »

Short term, a modern human would become dizzy from superoxygenation and likely remain that way. Long term, lifespans dramatically decrease as the excess oxygen poisons cells and accelerates genetic decay.

On the plus side, fucking eagle sized dragonflies, man!
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Post by CaptainChewbacca »

Admiral Valdemar wrote:Short term, a modern human would become dizzy from superoxygenation and likely remain that way. Long term, lifespans dramatically decrease as the excess oxygen poisons cells and accelerates genetic decay.

On the plus side, fucking eagle sized dragonflies, man!
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Cykeisme
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Post by Cykeisme »

Admiral Valdemar wrote:Short term, a modern human would become dizzy from superoxygenation and likely remain that way. Long term, lifespans dramatically decrease as the excess oxygen poisons cells and accelerates genetic decay.
Why does superoxygenation do that? What exactly happens to a person's blood, brain and muscle tissue etc when there's too much oxygen?

CaptainChewbacca wrote:
Admiral Valdemar wrote:On the plus side, fucking eagle sized dragonflies, man!
Six drumsticks!
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Post by Gil Hamilton »

Cykeisme wrote:Why does superoxygenation do that? What exactly happens to a person's blood, brain and muscle tissue etc when there's too much oxygen?
Oyxgen is toxic it too high a concentration and can lead to oxygen narcosis. That's why divers don't put mere pressurized air in their diving cylinders, because in that concentration in deep diving, both nitrogen and oxygen becomse toxic (hence they mix in large amount of helium).
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Post by Cos Dashit »

Would everything on the planet become much more prone to burning? 30% more oxygen, wouldn't you have to be careful when dropping a stick on a rock?
Please forgive any idiotic comments, stupid observations, or dumb questions in above post, for I am but a college student with little real world experience.
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Admiral Valdemar
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Post by Admiral Valdemar »

Cos Dashit wrote:Would everything on the planet become much more prone to burning? 30% more oxygen, wouldn't you have to be careful when dropping a stick on a rock?
Yes, in fact, thunderstorms back then were mobile warzones, with any lightning strike on a tree or something causing an explosion and a fairly sizeable firestorm.
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Post by Guardsman Bass »

Wouldn't your chance of cancer greatly increase over the long-term too, from all the cell damage? I remember reading that in a paragraph in James Lovelock's hypothetical scenario book called The Greening of Mars.
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Admiral Valdemar
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Post by Admiral Valdemar »

Yes, because as stated, oxygen is extremely toxic and the reason we age is basically down to accumulated genetic defects from free radicals and other reactive oxygen species. Unfortunately, it's our best electron donor/acceptor, so we need O2.
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Post by wolveraptor »

Would such reactive particles be necessary for metabolism in higher species? What I mean is, would aliens necessarily suffer from the effects of oxygen-like particles while breathing?
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