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Science and the Environment. Chapter 1. Environment. My definition:. What the book says:. Everything around us Includes the natural world as well as things produced by humans. Environmental Science. The study of the impact of humans on the environment. The Goals of Environmental Science.
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Science and the Environment Chapter 1
Environment My definition: What the book says: • Everything around us • Includes the natural world as well as things produced by humans.
Environmental Science • The study of the impact of humans on the environment
The Goals of Environmental Science • To understand and solve environmental problems • Accomplished by studying 2 main types of interactions between humans and the environment • How we use natural resources • How our actions alter our environment
Environmental Science is an interdisciplinary science. • Involves many fields of study • Biology: the study of living organisms • Earth Science: the study of the Earth’s nonliving systems and the planet as a whole • Physics: the study of matter and energy • Chemistry: the study of chemicals and their interactions • Social Science: the study of human populations
Ecology vs. Environmental Science Ecology Environmental Science • The study of how things interact with each other & their nonliving environment • The study of the impact of humans on the environment
Examples of How Fields of Study Contribute to Environmental Science • A scientist is studying how pollutants travel underground. • A scientist is studying fossils to see how Earth’s climate has changed in the past. • A scientist is studying how windmills should be designed to provide the most energy. Geology or Geochemistry Paleontology or climatology engineering
Examples of How Fields of Study Contribute to Environmental Science • Choose an article. • Write a short summary (3-5 sentences). • Identify what fields of study are involved in this research/news. • Provide evidence from the article to show this involvement.
ENVIRONMENT THROUGH TIME • Hunters and Gatherers • Agricultural Revolution • Industrial Revolution
Hunter-Gatherers Characteristics Effects on the environment Altered habitats to meet their needs Ex: burned prairies to prevent tree growth so they could hunt bison Overhunting may have led to the disappearance of some species of large mammals • Obtain food by collecting plants, hunting wild animals, or scavenging their remains • Migrated during the year
The Agricultural Revolution Characteristics Effects on the environment Habitats were destroyed for farming Soil loss, floods, water shortages • Began to collect seeds & domesticate animals • Allowed populations to grow at an unprecedented rate • Populations concentrated in smaller areas
The Industrial Revolution Characteristics Effects on the environment Machinery reduced the amount of land needed for farming Pollution Use of artificial substances, in place of plant & animal products, that caused more problems later (plastics) • Shift from using animal sources & running water to fossil fuels • Increased the efficiency of agriculture, industry & transportation • Populations in urban areas grew • Allowed food & other goods to be transported
Spaceship Earth • Earth can be compared to a giant spaceship • Traveling through space • Living cargo • Limited supplies • Unable to dispose of waste or take on new supplies • Closed system: nothing comes in, nothing goes out
What Are Our Main Environmental Problems? • Can be grouped into 3 categories • Resource depletion • Pollution • Loss of biodiversity
Resource Depletion • Natural resource • Any natural material that is used by humans • Renewable • DEF: Can be replaced relatively quickly by natural processes • EX: Fresh water, air, soil, trees, crops, energy from the sun • Nonrenewable • DEF:Forms at a much slower rate than the rate that it is consumed • EX: Minerals and fossil fuels
Pollution • DEF: An undesired change in air, water, or soil that adversely affects the health, survival, or activities of humans or other organisms • Biodegradable • DEF: Pollutants that can be broken down by natural processes • EX: Human sewage, food wastes • Nondegradable • DEF: Cannot be broken down by natural processes • EX: Mercury, lead, some plastics
Loss of Biodiversity • Biodiversity • DEF: The number & variety of species that live in an area • The organisms we share the world with can be considered natural resources. • An extinct species: a nonrenewable resource • If current rates of extinction continue, it may cause problems for human populations in the future • All species have potential VALUE: economic, ecological, scientific, aesthetic, and recreational value.
Section 1-2 The Environment and Society
“The Tragedy of the Commons” • 1968, ecologist Garrett Hardin: • The main difficulty in solving environmental problems is the conflict between the short-term interests of individuals and the long-term welfare of society. • Someone or some group has to take responsibility for maintaining a resource. • If no one takes that responsibility, the resource can be overused and become depleted.
Economics and the Environment • Economic forces influence how we use resources • Supply and Demand • The greater the demand for a limited supply of something, the more that thing is worth • Costs and Benefits • Cost of environmental solutions can be high • A cost-benefit analysis balances the cost of the action against the benefits one expects from it • Risk Assessment • Helps us create cost-effective ways to protect our health and the environment
Developed & Developing Countries • Developed • Higher average incomes • Slower population growth • Diverse industrial economies • Stronger social support systems • Ex: US, Japan, Canada, countries of Western Europe • Developing • Lower average incomes • Simple & agricultural-based economies • Rapid population growth • Ex: Indonesia, Ethiopia
Developed nations use about 75% of the world’s resources, even though they make up only about 20% of the world’s population. • One way to express the differences in consumption between nations: • Ecological footprint • Shows the productive area of Earth needed to support one person in a particular country.
A key goal ofenvironmental science • The condition in which human needs are met in such a way that a human population can survive indefinitely Sustainability