History of Environmentalism

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Exploitation Years ( ) A. The Roots of Abuse 1. The first colonists o disease, starvation, war 2. Manifest Destiny & Westward Expansion o.
Advertisements

GREEN CHEMISTRY GREEN CHEMISTRY Presentation Courtesy of the American Chemical Society PREVENTING POLLUTION SUSTAINING THE EARTH 1.
 The Tribal Era  The Frontier Era (1607 – 1890)  Early Conservationists (1832 – 1870)  Current Era (1870 – 2012)
History of Environmental Science
Chapter 21 Section 5 Environmentalism. DDT In 1966 a Long Island family discovered that the pesticide DDT was being used to control mosquitoes at a lake.
Earth Science 4.4 Protecting Resources
Environmental problems
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Chapter Section The Environmental Movement Assess the causes and effects of the environmental movement. Analyze.
History of the Environmental Movement in the United States
ENVI 300 Environmental Issues Dr. Ron Kaufmann Shiley Center 274 (x5904) Office Hrs: Mo 12:30-1:30, Tu 2:30-5:00, Fr 12:30-2:00
History of Environmental Science
Chapter 2: History of Environmental Science Conservation vs. Preservation Modern Environmental Movement Key Players and Viewpoints.
CHAPTER 6 HUMANS IN THE BIOSPHERE
Timeline of Environmental Science
Non-renewable & Renewable Resources.
Human Impacts on the Environment
Environmental Problems Patten & Valdner Global History II Mepham High School Patten & Valdner Global History II Mepham High School.
Chapter 3 Environmental History, Politics, and Economics.
1 THE ENVIRONMENT. AIR POLLUTION WATER POLLUTION RUBBISH NOISE.
EGS1003: Section on International Environmental Justice and the Climate Change Challenge Mary Lawhon This work.
Going Green Birth of the Environmental Movement 21.4.
History of Environmental Science Three “revolutions” are significant in the development of environmental science 1. Agricultural Revolution 2. Industrial-Medical.
Environmental Problems, Their Causes, and Sustainability Chapter 1.
The Rise of Environmentalism Rachael Carson Marine Biologist Wrote the book Silent Spring about use of pesticides Warned of “silent spring” with no birds.
Environmental History (in brief). Early US Environmental History  Colonial era  Nature and the English Diaspora  Frontier Era  Rapid expansion of.
Blair Johnson Technology allowed scientists like John Snow to trace diseases like chlorea for the first time. People start to demand cleaner drinking.
The Lorax Objective: We will analyze the need for and the creation of environmental regulations.
DO NOW Define: – Ecological Footprint – Sustainable.
Environmental History: Learning from the Past. Environmental History of the US 4 Eras The environmental history of the US can be divided into 4 eras:
Chapter 16 Human Impact on Ecosystems
UNIT 1: Environmental Decision Making Population Crisis: Most environmentalists agree that the root cause of most environmental problems has been human.
History of Environmental Science Three “revolutions” are significant in the development of environmental science 1. Agricultural Revolution 2. Industrial-Medical.
Historical Overview of the Modern Environmental Movement.
Pollution in Europe.
Humans in the Biosphere Chapter 6 Mrs. Yanac. Limited Resources All organisms on Earth must share the planet’s resources and they are LIMITED. Humans.
Environmental Problems Smog Smog Industrial Pollution Industrial Pollution Acid Rain Acid Rain Nuclear Radiation Nuclear Radiation Cuyahoga River Fire.
Today’s Schedule – 05/21/ Timeline Check
The Environment and America. Early Environmentalism in the US 1850s and 60s: Common interest in pure drinking water and sanitation is spurred by epidemics.
History of the Environmental Movement. Earliest Accounts of Environmental Concerns Air and water pollution was not a much of a concern, though places.
Environmental Laws. Lacey Act (1900) John F. Lacey “Father of Conservation Legislation”
Human Activities and the Earth’s Valuable Water and Air Resources
History of Ecology Our Significant Past Our Common Future.
History of the Environmental Movement
Environmental Science Historical Overview of the modern environmental movement.
Environmental History
Human Impact on Ecosystems 7 th Grade Life Science Woodstock Middle School.
Human Impact on the Biosphere:. Natural Resources  Renewable Resource: nature can replace it in the near future.  Sustainable Yield: the replacement.
1 1.1ADVANCED ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE Environmental Science is the study of ecosystems interacting with human systems.
Saving the Earth Chapter 26, Section 4 By Thomas Parsons.
ES101 9/9/10 Env. Ethics & History of the Environmental Movement PUT YOUR SECTION NUMBER ON YOUR ASSIGNMENT! &, turn reading questions up front now, OR,
The Environmental Movement Key Terms Coal smog = toxic waste: – Poisonous byproduct of human activity Acid Rain = moisture due to the mixture of.
Environmental Problems
LT: Today I can apply scientific concepts to understand environmental issues by analyzing the author’s purpose in diagrams. What are natural resources.
History of Environmentalism
The Globalization of Environmentalism
Objectives Assess the causes and effects of the environmental movement. Analyze why environmental protection became a controversial issue.
Protecting America’s Environment
European Environmental Issues
The Environmental Movement
Chapter 24 Section 4 Notes The Birth of Modern Environmentalism
4.4 Protecting Resources.
Introduction to Environmental Systems and Societies
The Globalization of Environmentalism
Resources and Conservation
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION.
Chapter 4.4 Protecting Resources.
Objectives Assess the causes and effects of the environmental movement. Analyze why environmental protection became a controversial issue.
Iran Hostage Questions
Air Quality.
Objectives Assess the causes and effects of the environmental movement. Analyze why environmental protection became a controversial issue.
Presentation transcript:

History of Environmentalism modified from http://www.radford.edu/~wkovarik/envhist/

Environmental issues have surfaced throughout human history. public health conservation preservation of nature smoke abatement municipal housekeeping occupational disease air and water pollution

Ancient Civilizations Air pollution was common in large towns– from dust, wood smoke, tanneries, animal manure and other things Ancient Rome was notorious for sewage-filled streets Timbering stripped the forests of Babylon, Greece, Lebanon and Italy as civilization rose. The wood energy crisis led Greeks to use passive solar energy by orienting their cities and houses toward the sun Soil conservation was not widely practiced. China, India and Peru understood the long term impact of soil erosion and tried to prevent it before 1200 AD

The Middle Ages & Renaissance Plague devastates Europe, leads to the beginnings of a public health system Timbering in the forests of England, France, Germany leaves totally stripped land, forcing a switch to coal Occupational diseases are investigated, begin to recognizes public health problems 1200-1750

The Era of Enlightenment Reason overtakes superstition. Ben Franklin's fight against water pollution. Movement to clean up waterways, slums and prisons. Thomas Malthus predicts that eventually, food and resources will run out as populations explode. New technologies create new pollution. 1750-1830

The Industrial Revolution Living conditions in urban areas horrify reform- minded commissions. Pure drinking water and sanitation is spurred by epidemics of typhoid and cholera Smog episodes begin killing residents of large cities like London. Conservation of wilderness areas begins with the killing of an enormous tree, called the "Mother of the Forest”. Water pollution carried disease, John Snow, traced a part of the cholera epidemic to a contaminated water pump in 1855. 1830-1890

The Progressive Era Reform was a common concern for working conditions, slum housing, food poisoning, sanitation, drinking water, polluting industries and more Teddy Roosevelt and his forester Gifford Pinchot characterized the era with ideas about conserving large tracts of land and putting other forests to "wise use.” John Muir opposes the "wise use" idea and fights for outright preservation of unspoiled wilderness New organizations like women’s clubs and the Sierra Club are formed. 1890-1920

The Roaring Twenties & The Depression National Coast Anti Pollution League is formed. Concerns about oil and sewage pollution. International oil dumping treaty passed by Congress in 1924. Harvard M.D. Alice Hamilton describes Charles Kettering of General Motors, as “nothing but a murderer”; Hamilton's fight to point out alternatives. Civilian Conservation Corps is founded by FDR during the depression. The “chemurgy” movement replaces petroleum with farm alcohol. Other industrial uses for agricultural crops begins. 1920-1940

World War II & The Fifties Synthetic rubber and chemicals from renewable resources proved vital to winning WWII “A Sand County Almanac” by Aldo Leopold is published in 1948. Expresses the expanding sense of human responsibility. Deadly smog episodes in Pennsylvania, London, New York, and Los Angeles. Air pollution crisis is underway. 1955 the first international air pollution conference is held. Increasing CO2 buildup reported by Scripps Oceanographic Institute scientists. 1940-1960

The Sixties Rachel Carson's book “Silent Spring” pesticides are killing the birds. Senate hearings in 1965 reveal falsified lead industry research by the gasoline companies and General Motors June 22, 1969, oil and chemicals in the Cuyahoga River in Cleveland, Ohio catch fire UNESCO conference on “Man and His Environment” takes place in San Francisco in 1969. “The Tragedy of the Commons” by Garrett Harden argues that unregulated industry could turn the planet in a wasteland 1960-1970

The Seventies The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is formed Air pollution is cut back. (catalytic converters on new cars that use only unleaded gasoline) Water pollution is greatly decreased through a massive sewage treatment expansion program. Toxic chemicals become more troubling. Nuclear power safety increases. (Three Mile Island accident). Energy crisis in oil supply. 1970-1980

The Eighties Bhopal mass poisoning in India; the Chernobyl nuclear reactor disaster in Ukraine; and the Challenger shuttle and Exxon Valdez oil spills in the U.S. Ozone depletion from fluorocarbons is finally taken seriously, Montreal Protocol in 1987 is signed. Legislation for cleaning up toxic waste passes Congress. The Rainbow Warrior, a Greenpeace ship bombed by French secret service agents in New Zealand in 1985. Warnings about global climate change become more convincing as evidence mounts. 1980-1990

The Nineties Earth Summit occurred in Rio, Brazil in 1992. The world leaders agreed to combat global warming, protect biodiversity and stop using dangerous poisons. Global Warming: CO2 gas, released from burning fossil fuel like gasoline, diesel, coal, oil and gas was causing the planet to heat up. Lack of landfill space leads to the beginning of recycling bins. Green products grew in numbers at the supermarket shelves.

The Present 2000-2012 Assignment: Find 5 Environmental Impact that has occurred between the years 2000-2012 and Explain how it impacts the environment.