Download presentation
Published bySherilyn Horn Modified over 9 years ago
1
BIOLOGY 157: LIFE SCIENCE: AN ENVIRONMENTAL APPROACH (Air Pollution)
2
AIR POLLUTION Non-Anthropogenic ---- caused by non-human processes (volcanoes, decomposition, etc.) Anthropogenic produced by human activities Some things which can be air pollutants: SO2 (sulfur dioxide) CO2, CO (carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide) H2S (hydrogen sulfide) CH4 (methane) NO2, NO, N2O (various nitrogen oxides) O3 (ozone) HCN (hydrogen cyanide) Lead, Selenium, Fluorine Particulates (soot, dust) Numerous Organic Compounds
3
PRIMARY AND SECONDARY AIR POLLUTANTS (I)
Primary Air Pollutants those that are directly released from various activities SO2, CO2, CO, H2S, NO, particulates Secondary Air Pollutants those that result from the reaction of primary with other primary or primary with various ‘normal’ constituents of the atmosphere; the sun usually catalyzes the reactions Ozone (O3), Peroxyacyl Nitrates (PAN’s), H2SO4, HCL, HNO3 , NO2, N2O
4
PRIMARY AND SECONDARY AIR POLLUTANTS (II)
5
EMISSIONS OF MAJOR AIR POLLUTANTS IN THE U.S. (I)
6
EMISSIONS OF MAJOR AIR POLLUTANTS IN THE U.S. (II)
7
SIZE OF SUSPENDED PARTICULATE MATTER
8
TYPES OF SMOG Grey Air (= Industrial Smog, Sulfurous Smog, London Smog) colder more moist climates mainly results from smoke (particulates) + SO2 London (UK); Lewiston (ID) / Clarkston (WA) Brown Air (= Photochemical Smog, Los Angeles Smog) warmer (and sometimes drier) climates primary pollutants (COx, NO, Hydrocarbons) + SUN yields secondary pollutants (ozone, PAN’s) Los Angeles; Donora (PA) near Pittsburgh, 1948
9
FORMATION OF PHOTOCHEMICAL SMOG
10
INDOOR AND OUTDOOR AIR POLLUTION
Which is the more serious problem? Generally the indoor what is outside tends to get inside many different things tend to be produced / released indoors from materials / processes things that are produced inside often are trapped there we tend to spend much more time indoors than out
11
INDOOR AIR POLLUTANTS
12
FACTORS AFFECTING AIR POLLUTION SEVERITY
Type of pollutant (light / heavy) Degree of Urbanization (Urban Heat Dome) Wind (speed and direction) Altitude Latitude Humidity Terrain (Mountains / Valleys / Temp. Inversions)
13
URBAN HEAT DOME
14
TEMPERATURE INVERSIONS
15
EFFECTS OF AIR POLLUTION (I)
Health lethargy (lead and others) headaches (CO, arsenic) temporary breathing difficulties (SO2, H2S) emphysema (ozone, particulates) chronic bronchitis (particulates) bone / teeth malformation (fluorine) mental impairment (lead, mercury)
16
EFFECTS OF AIR POLLUTION (II)
Deterioration of stone and metals in buildings (SO2, H2SO4, NO2, HNO3) Breakdown of rubber products (ozone and acids) Reduction in plant growth and plant health (ozone, acids) Climate - warming from greenhouse gases such as CO2, N2O, CH3, chlorofluorocarbons (CFC’s) - cooling from particulates Habitat Destruction (acidification of lakes and high mountain ecosystems) Ozone Depletion in the Stratosphere increases UV light; increases mutations and cancers (CFC’s)
17
ACID DEPOSITION Dry / Wet pH of 5.6 or less
unimpacted precipitation has a pH of 5.7 with water in the atmosphere: ~ CO2 goes to carbonic acid ~ SO2 goes to sulfuric acid ~ NO2 goes to nitric acid Acid deposition is more likely to have an effect in high mountains and in areas low in bases (little or no neutralizing capability)
18
ACID DEPOSITION
19
ACID DEPOSITION AND SOIL pH
20
AREAS IN WHICH U.S. LAKES AND STREAMS ARE ESPECIALLY VULNERABLE TO ACID DEPOSITION
21
HARMFUL EFFECTS OF AIR POLLUTANTS ON TREES
22
GREENHOUSE EFFECT AND GLOBAL WARMING
Is the Earth warming? Yes. Is this due to the greenhouse effect or to some cycle that can affect climate? ?????????? What are the major greenhouse gases? CO2, N2O, CH4, CFC’s, (H2O ?) Could the Earth also cool from human activities and enter an ice age? Yes - and there have been ‘recent’ short duration cooling events! Global warming could be a positive feedback system!!!!!
23
GREENHOUSE EFFECT
24
AUTUMN EFFECT (NUCLEAR WINTER)
25
SOME POINTS CONCERNING THE EARTH’S TEMPERATURE
current average surface temp. is 150C (= 59OF) without an atmosphere it would be -180C (= 0OF) estimated average temp. during coldest part of last ice age was only 5OC (9OF) less than today last major ice age ended 12,000 years ago sea levels are 300 feet higher that at the peak of the ice age (and are still rising!) greenhouse gases have increased dramatically since 1850 (actually since 1950!) CO2 has gone from 280 ppm to 380 ppm since 1850 (a 36% increase)
26
THE MAJOR GREENHOUSE GASES
Gas % impact compared contribution to CO2 per to global warming molecule CO CFC’s ,000 to 20,000 CH N2O
27
PROJECTED GROWTH OF GREENHOUSE GASES
28
PATTERN OF GLOBAL CO2 EMISSIONS (1950 & 1980)
29
PATTERN OF GLOBAL CO2 EMISSIONS (2000)
30
RISE IN ATMOSPHERIC CO2
31
INCREASE IN GLOBAL TEMPERATURE
32
HUMAN ACTIVITIES THAT CAUSE GLOBAL WARMING
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.