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Environmental Chemistry
Visual Dictionary
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Nutrient: elements and compounds that organisms need for living, growing and reproducing
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Enzyme: catalyst involved in chemical reactions in living things.
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Organic compounds: compounds whose molecules contain CARBON (for example fossil fuels or glucose). [exceptions: carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, carbonates, and cyanides which are inorganic]. Glucose molecule
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Inorganic compounds: compounds whose molecules DO NOT contain carbon
Inorganic compounds: compounds whose molecules DO NOT contain carbon. Also included as inorganic compounds are carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, carbonates and cyanides. Copper nickel sulphate nitrate
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Protein: organic compound made up of units called amino acids; protein molecules contain atoms of nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen and carbon.
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Lipid : organic molecules made up of atoms of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen (example, fats, oils and waxes). Lipids are not soluble in water.
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Carbohydrate: organic molecules made up of atoms of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen ( example pasta, rice, potatoes, fruits and breads) ; can form simple molecules such as sugar, or large complex molecules such as starch, cellulose and glycogen.
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Macromineral: nutrients that organisms need in relatively large amounts.
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Trace element: nutrients that are essential for plant and animal growth and development, but are only needed in very small amounts. Also called microminerals. Ex. Selenium.
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Vitamin: Any of a group of organic compounds that are essential for normal growth and nutrition and are required in small quantities in the diet.
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biological magnification: increase in concentration of a chemical or element as it moves up the food chain.
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Herbicide: chemical used to kill or control weeds.
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Fungicide: chemical used to kill fungi.
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Pesticide: chemical used to kill pests
Pesticide: chemical used to kill pests. Pests are organisms that harm people, crops or structures.
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Acid: compound that dissolves in water to form a solution with a pH lower than 7. Ex. Sulphuric acid, formic acid, nitric acid
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Base: compound that dissolves in water to form a solution with a pH higher than 7. Ex. Baking soda, soap, lye, toothpaste.
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acid precipitation (acid rain): precipitation with a pH lower than 5
acid precipitation (acid rain): precipitation with a pH lower than 5.6 is considered acid rain.
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Indicator: to identify a substance as an acid or base or neutral, an indicator is used ( litmus paper, phenol red for example).
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pH scale: a measure of the percent of hydrogen ions in a solution; most solutions have a pH in the range of 0 to is very acidic, 14 is very basic, and 7 is neutral.
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Acid-Base neutralization: when an acid and a base combine, the products are a salt and water.
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leachate: water that passes through soil and carries dissolved substances with it.
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Heavy metal: metals that have a density of 5 or higher ( copper, zinc, lead, mercury, cadmium, nickel); heavy metals are one type of substance monitored to determine water quality.
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pollution: any change in the environment that produces a condition that is harmful to living things.
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Toxicity: how poisonous a substance is.
acute toxicity: toxicity that is harmful after one exposure. chronic toxicity: toxicity that is harmful after long term exposure.
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LD50: lethal dose 50; amount of a substance that causes 50% of a group of test animals to die if they are given a specified dose of the substance all at once.
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Biological indicator: example – monitoring the number of crayfish in a lake. If the population starts to decrease, it is an indicator that the lake is being poisoned. Scientists use organisms that live in water to help determine water quality.
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