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Bellringer
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Objectives
Define environmental science and compare
environmental science with ecology.
List the five major fields of study that contribute to
environmental science.
Describe the major environmental effects of huntergatherers, the agricultural revolution, and the Industrial
Revolution.
Distinguish between renewable and nonrenewable
resources.
Classify environmental problems into three major
categories.
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Hunter-Gatherers
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Hunter-Gatherers
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Spaceship Earth
Earth can be compared to a spaceship traveling through
space as it cannot dispose of its waste or take on new
supplies.
Earth is essentially a closed system.
This means that the only thing that enters the Earths
atmosphere in large amounts is energy from the sun,
and the only thing that leaves in large amounts is heat.
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Spaceship Earth
This type of closed system has some potential problems.
Some resources are limited and as the population grows
the resources will be used more rapidly.
There is also the possibility that we will produce wastes
more quickly than we can dispose of them.
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Spaceship Earth
Environmental problems can occur on different scales:
local, regional, or global.
A local example would be your community discussing
where to build a new landfill.
A regional example would be a polluted river 1000
miles away affecting the regions water.
A global example would be the depletion of the ozone
layer.
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Population Growth
The Industrial Revolution, modern medicine, and
sanitation all allowed the human population to grow
faster than it ever had before.
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Population Growth
In the past 50 years, nations have used vast amounts of
resources to meet the worlds need for food.
Producing enough food for large populations has
environmental consequences such as habitat destruction
and pesticide pollution.
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Population Growth
Most scientists think that the human population will
almost double in the 21st century before it begins to
stabilize.
Because of these predictions, we can expect the
pressure on the environment will continue to increase
and the human population and its need for food and
resources grow.
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Resource Depletion
Natural Resources are any natural materials that are
used by humans, such as, water, petroleum, minerals,
forests, and animals.
Natural resources are classified as either a renewable
resources or a nonrenewable resource.
Resource Depletion
Renewable resources can
be replaced relatively
quickly by natural process.
Nonrenewable resources
form at a much slower rate
than they are consumed.
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Resource Depletion
Resources are said to be depleted when a large fraction
of the resource has been used up.
Once the supply of a nonrenewable resource has been
used up, it may take millions of years to replenish it.
Renewable resources, such as trees, may also be
depleted causing deforestation in some areas.
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Pollution
Pollution is an undesirable change in the natural
environment that is caused by the introduction of
substances that are harmful to living organisms or by
excessive wastes, heat, noise, or radiation
Much of the pollution that troubles us today is produced
by human activities and the accumulation of wastes.
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Pollution
There are two main types of pollutants:
Biodegradable pollutants, which can be broken down
by natural processes and include materials such as
newspaper.
Nondegradable pollutants, which cannot be broken
down by natural processes and include materials
such as mercury.
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Pollution
Degradable pollutants are a problem only when they
accumulate faster than they can be broken down.
However, because nondegradable pollutants do not
break down easily, they can build up to dangerous levels
in the environment.
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Loss of Biodiversity
Biodiversity is the variety of organisms in a given area,
the genetic variation within a population, the variety of
species in a community, or the variety of communities in
an ecosystem.
The organisms that share the world with us can be
considered natural resources.
We depend on them for food, the oxygen we breathe,
and for many other things.
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Loss of Biodiversity
Yet, only a fraction of all the species that once roamed
the Earth are alive today, and many are extinct.
Scientists think that if the current extinction rates
continue, it may cause problems for the human
population.
Many people also argue that all species have potential
economic, scientific, aesthetics, and recreational value,
so it is important to preserve them.
Graphic Organizer
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Quick LAB
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