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Ch. 4 Energy & Mineral Resources
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Uses … What resources have you used within the last hour? List them.
Were they renewable or nonrenewable?
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Resources Renewable – can be replenished over short time (months, years, decades) Ex) plants, animals, natural fibers, trees (food, clothes, paper, lumber)
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Nonrenewable – take millions of years to form and accumulate.
Ex) coal, oil, natural gas, metals (fuel, iron, gold)
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Make a T-Chart Title one side renewable resources
and one side nonrenewable resources. Classify as many things as you can in this room as either type of resource. 5
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H C Fossil fuels Hydrocarbon (Hydrogen & carbon)
Used as source of energy Ex) Coal, Oil, Natural Gas, Petroleum How did fossil fuels form? 1 6 H C 1.0079 12.011
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Coal Forms when plant material is exposed to heat and pressure
4 stages: Peat: partial decay, soil-like Lignite: sedimentary rock, brown coal Bituminous: soft coal Anthracite: metamorphic rock, hard coal
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Coal cont. Used by power plants to generate electricity
Lots of coal reserves in U.S. Problems Scars land Loss of life and health Air pollution (sulfur … acid rain)
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Petroleum & Natural Gas
Form from remains of plants and animals buried in ancient seas. Steps: Buried under sediments (protects against decay) Chemical reactions transform in to liquid and gas
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Petroleum & Natural Gas
After formation: Squeezed from mud-rich sediments Move into permeable rocks (under water) Less dense then water so float on top World supplies will deteriorate
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Oil Traps – rock structure that accumulates liquids that trap oil and gas under the surface
Ex) Anticline P. 96, figure 3
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Alternate Fuel Sources
Tar Sands - clay, sand and water mixed with thick tar (bitumen) Occur in sandstone, limestone, shale Hard to mine (very thick)
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Oil Shale – rock containing kerogan (fossil fuel)
Mined Expensive to process
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Mineral Resources Deposits of minerals that can be extracted from rocks for profit Form from rock cycle processes Metals and Nonmetals Ex) Ore – useful metallic mineral mined for $$$
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Alternate Energy Sources
Solar Nuclear Wind Hydroelectric Geothermal Tidal
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Solar Energy Direct use of sun’s rays to supply heat or electricity
Passive and active types Advantages … free and non-polluting Disadvantages … equipment and install costly, clouds
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Nuclear Energy Nuclear fission – nuclei of atoms split releasing lots of energy Fuel is radioactive materials Heat & Electric Power plants Advantages … lots of energy Disadvantages … costly to build safe facilities and many hazards
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Nuclear Fission Reaction
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Wind Energy Wind powers turbines that power electrical energy
Advantages … natural & renewable Disadvantages … location (islands), noise pollution, land availability
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Hydroelectric Power Falling water drives waterwheels and turbines which produce electricity 5% of electricity in U.S. Dams Advantages … water power is renewable Disadvantages … dams have lifespan, available locations
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Geothermal Energy Underground hot water and steam
Heat and turn turbines generating electric power Occur around recent volcanic activity (magma) Advantages … clean, natural Disadvantages … exhaustible, limited locations
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Tidal Power Ocean and tides generate electrical energy
In-Out flow of tides drives turbines Advantages … natural, water power is renewable Disadvantages … costly to build
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Section 4.3 – Water, Air & Land Resources/Pollution
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Pollution types Point source: specified location Ex) factory pipes
Nonpoint source: no specific origin Ex) Oil from streets Sediment from construction sites Pesticides from fields
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Earth = the Water Planet
97% salt water (oceans) % fresh water
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Freshwater Pollution Negative Effects Damage human body
Sicken or kill aquatic life Cause disease
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AIR Made of Nitrogen, Oxygen, Water Vapor and other gases.
Composition maintains life 78% N 21% O 1% other gases
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Acid Rain Greenhouse Gas
Air Pollution 1) Fossil Fuel Burning Acid Rain Greenhouse Gas -Cars -CO2 -Power plants -Warms planet Global Warming
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Air Pollution 2) Ozone Depletion - CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons)
- Aerosol cans, A.C., Plastics - Less protection from radiation
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Air Pollution Heath Effects … - Coughing
- Lung, eye, throat irritation - Asthma, Emphysema, Cancer
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Land Provides Giving us … Soil Forests Mineral resources
Energy resources Giving us … food -- zinc, copper lumber -- plastics petroleum
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Damage to Land 1) Mining ---- 500,000 in U.S Tears up surface
Destroys plants Soil Erosion Creates pollution
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Damage to Land 2) Agriculture (farming) Decrease amount of groundwater
Salinization of soil (salt build up) … not fertile anymore
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Damage to Land 3) Tree cutting Susceptible to soil erosion
Destroys ecosystems and wildlife homes Increases hazards (floods)
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Damage to Land 4) Waste Disposal Leak harmful waste
Damage soil & water supplies
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Section 4.4 – Protecting Resources
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U.S. Statistics USE 1/3 of World’s resources
PRODUCE 1/3 of World’s Trash Leads to POLLUTION! Need to CONSERVE!
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Conservation Careful use of resources
Pollution prevention (air, water, land)
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Keeping Water Safe & Clean
Clean Water Act: Reduce point source pollution Increase sewage treatment plants Safe Water Drinking Act (1974): Set maximum pollution levels ** Safe Water amounts increased from 36% (1972) to 62% (1999)!!
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Protecting the Air Clean Air Act (1970):
Made standards for 6 major pollutants Carbon Monoxide Ozone Lead Sulfur dioxide Nitrogen oxides’ Particulates
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By 2001, emissions of these decreased 24%, even though energy use and population increased
Alternate Energy Sources Energy Conservation
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Caring for Land: Prevent pollution and manage wisely
Soil Conservation Contour plowing & Strip Cropping Selective Cutting Preserves forests, soils, wildlife
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Less farming chemicals
Natural fertilizers (compost) Reduce runoff pollution Sanitary Landfills (no dumps) Liners protect from leaking
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LAWS 1) Resource Conservation & Recovery Act (1976):
- decreased illegal/unsafe dumping - guidelines for transport/storage of hazardous waste
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- requires clean up of abandon hazardous waste sites
2) Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (1980): - requires clean up of abandon hazardous waste sites RECYCLING: collecting and processing of used items so they can be made into new products
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