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Ch. 4 Energy & Mineral Resources.

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Presentation on theme: "Ch. 4 Energy & Mineral Resources."— Presentation transcript:

1 Ch. 4 Energy & Mineral Resources

2 Uses … What resources have you used within the last hour? List them.
Were they renewable or nonrenewable?

3 Resources Renewable – can be replenished over short time (months, years, decades) Ex) plants, animals, natural fibers, trees (food, clothes, paper, lumber)

4 Nonrenewable – take millions of years to form and accumulate.
Ex) coal, oil, natural gas, metals (fuel, iron, gold)

5 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

6 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

7 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

8

9 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)

10 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

11 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

12 Oil Traps – rock structure that accumulates liquids that trap oil and gas under the surface
Ex) Anticline P. 96, figure 3

13 Alternate Fuel Sources
Tar Sands - clay, sand and water mixed with thick tar (bitumen) Occur in sandstone, limestone, shale Hard to mine (very thick)

14 Oil Shale – rock containing kerogan (fossil fuel)
Mined Expensive to process

15 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 $$$

16 Alternate Energy Sources
Solar Nuclear Wind Hydroelectric Geothermal Tidal

17 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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19 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

20 Nuclear Fission Reaction

21 Wind Energy Wind powers turbines that power electrical energy
Advantages … natural & renewable Disadvantages … location (islands), noise pollution, land availability

22 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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24 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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26 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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28 Section 4.3 – Water, Air & Land Resources/Pollution

29 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

30 Earth = the Water Planet
97% salt water (oceans) % fresh water

31 Freshwater Pollution Negative Effects Damage human body
Sicken or kill aquatic life Cause disease

32 AIR Made of Nitrogen, Oxygen, Water Vapor and other gases.
Composition maintains life 78% N 21% O 1% other gases

33 Acid Rain Greenhouse Gas
Air Pollution 1) Fossil Fuel Burning Acid Rain Greenhouse Gas -Cars -CO2 -Power plants -Warms planet Global Warming

34 Air Pollution 2) Ozone Depletion - CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons)
- Aerosol cans, A.C., Plastics - Less protection from radiation

35 Air Pollution Heath Effects … - Coughing
- Lung, eye, throat irritation - Asthma, Emphysema, Cancer

36 Land Provides Giving us … Soil Forests Mineral resources
Energy resources Giving us … food -- zinc, copper lumber -- plastics petroleum

37 Damage to Land 1) Mining ---- 500,000 in U.S Tears up surface
Destroys plants Soil Erosion Creates pollution

38 Damage to Land 2) Agriculture (farming) Decrease amount of groundwater
Salinization of soil (salt build up) … not fertile anymore

39 Damage to Land 3) Tree cutting Susceptible to soil erosion
Destroys ecosystems and wildlife homes Increases hazards (floods)

40 Damage to Land 4) Waste Disposal Leak harmful waste
Damage soil & water supplies

41 Section 4.4 – Protecting Resources

42 U.S. Statistics USE 1/3 of World’s resources
PRODUCE 1/3 of World’s Trash Leads to POLLUTION! Need to CONSERVE!

43 Conservation Careful use of resources
Pollution prevention (air, water, land)

44 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)!!

45 Protecting the Air Clean Air Act (1970):
Made standards for 6 major pollutants Carbon Monoxide Ozone Lead Sulfur dioxide Nitrogen oxides’ Particulates

46 By 2001, emissions of these decreased 24%, even though energy use and population increased
Alternate Energy Sources Energy Conservation

47 Caring for Land: Prevent pollution and manage wisely
Soil Conservation Contour plowing & Strip Cropping Selective Cutting Preserves forests, soils, wildlife

48 Less farming chemicals
Natural fertilizers (compost) Reduce runoff pollution Sanitary Landfills (no dumps) Liners protect from leaking

49 LAWS 1) Resource Conservation & Recovery Act (1976):
- decreased illegal/unsafe dumping - guidelines for transport/storage of hazardous waste

50 - 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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