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Chapter 9 The Urban World
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Population and Urbanization Jobs define urban vs. rural, not populations
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Urbanization Trends Urbanization is increasing rapidly Especially in developing countries
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Urbanization Trends Urban Agglomeration megacities
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Substandard Housing No city services Water, sewage, garbage collection, police and fire protection 1/3 of urban population in developing countries are squatters
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Environmental Problems in Urban Areas Growing urban areas affect land use patterns Fragment wildlife Encroach wetlands, forests, desert, etc. Impermeable surfaces and urban runoff discharged into waterways Motor oil, lawn fertilizers, heavy metals Noise pollution Light pollution
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Environmental Problems in Urban Areas Brownfields Urban areas of abandoned industrial or residential sites that may be contaminated from past use
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Temperature variations on a summer afternoon Urban Heat Island
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Air Pollution- Dust Domes
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Transportation and Urban Development Transportation availability affects city’s spatial structure
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Suburban Sprawl Suburban Sprawl Problems Loss of wetlands Air & water pollution Loss of biological habitat Suburbia: Where they tear out trees and then name streets after them
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Suburban Sprawl Smart Growth: urban planning and transportation strategy that mixes land uses Commercial Manufacturing Entertainment Housing
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Making Cities More Sustainable Characteristics of a sustainable city Clear, cohesive urban growth policies Efficient use of energy and other resources Reduction of pollution and waste Large areas of green space Designed to be people-centers, not car- centered Food grown IN the city (rooftop gardens) Compact development
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Green Building Design Orientation of the house Green energy (solar) Reclaimed materials Recycled water or water saving Low or no VOC’s Compost bins Green roof Lunar/solar tubes
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Chapter 23 Solid and Hazardous Wastes
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Types of Solid Waste Municipal solid waste (MSW) Non-municipal solid waste from industry, agriculture, and mining Municipal Solid Waste <
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Disposal of Solid Waste 3 methods Sanitary Landfills Incineration Recycling composting
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Sanitary Landfill Problems Methane gas Tires Plastic Contamination of surface & ground water Not a long-term remedy Few new facilities being opened Closing a full landfill is very expensive
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IncinerationPros Volume of solid waste reduced by 90% Produces heat that can make steam to generate electricity Produce less carbon emissions than fossil fuel power plants Cons Byproduct ash
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Waste Prevention Three Goals: (The 3 R’s) (1) REDUCE the amount of waste (2) Reuse products (3) Recycle materials http://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=landfill+harmoni c&FORM=HDRSC3#view=detail&mid=346C911E0F9961 4E8DC8346C911E0F99614E8DC8
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Reduce Compost
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Reducing Waste Purchase products with less packaging
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Reusing Products Refilling glass bottles
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Recycling Materials Every ton of recycled paper saves: 17 trees 7000 gallons of water 4100 kwatt-hrs of energy 3 cubic yards of landfill space Recycle Glass bottles, newspapers, steel cans, plastic bottles, cardboard, office paper
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Love Canal Toxic Waste Site Hazardous Waste Any discarded chemical that threatens human health or the environment Reactive, corrosive, explosive or toxic chemicals
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Case-In-Point Hanford Nuclear Reservation
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Management of Hazardous Waste Superfund National Priorities List States w/ the greatest # of sites New Jersey (114) California (94) Pennsylvania (94) New York (85) Michigan (65) We have Superfund sights in Maywood, Torrance…. http://www.epa.gov/SoCal/superfund/sfund-map.html
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Management of Hazardous Waste (1) Source reduction (2) Conversion to less hazardous materials Bioremediation - Phytoremediation (3) Long-term storage
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