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Chapter 7: Resources and the Environment

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Title: Chapter 7: Resources and the Environment


1
Chapter 7 Resources and the Environment
2
Chapter 7.1
3
Mineral Resources
4
Renewable or Nonrenewable?
  • The decisions that are made about earths
    resources have effects on its environment.
  • Environment includes all resources, influences
    and conditions near Earths surface.
  • Important to the world economy are coal, oil and
    the metal ores.
  • Renewable resources one that can be replaced in
    nature at a rate close to its rate of use.
  • Oxygen, tree, food grown in soil
  • Nonrenewable resources exists in a fixed amount
    or is used up faster than it can be replaced.

5
Earths Minerals
  • Metallic elements are of greater economic
    importance than nonmetallic.
  • Some metallic elements are easily separated from
    the rocks they form in e.g. gold, silver
  • Most metals are chemically combined with other
    elements and must be chemically separated.
  • ORE when a rock contains enough of a metallic
    element to make separation profitable.
  • Ore mineral valuable minerals
  • Gangue left over material

6
Supply and Demand
  • Minerals are not replaced as fast as or faster
    than they are used.
  • Reserves are the known deposits of a mineral in
    ores worth mining.
  • If demand is high and the price of a mineral goes
    up reserves may increase.
  • Minerals are nonrenewable knowing the size of
    the reserve helps to estimate how long reserves
    will last.

7
Use of Minerals
  • The U.S. now imports platinum, magnesium, cobalt,
    tin and nickel because it has extinguished its
    reserves.
  • Due to the high demand society has on metal ores
    all reserves are thought to be depleted in 60
    years.
  • Nonmetals such as sand, gravel and crushed stone
    are taken from quarries (small open pits).

8
Chapter 7.3
9
Environmental Issues
10
Risk and Disadvantages
  • Nonrenewables (coal, oil) produce more pollution
    than renewables
  • Mining for minerals
  • Landscapes can be destroyed
  • Surface compounds in the waste material can
    pollute streams with sulfuric acid
  • Ore processing can leave heavy metals behind

11
  • Nonrenewable Energy
  • Nuclear reactors produce dangerous radioactive
    materials there is no safe way established to
    store this material.
  • Burning Fossil Fuels
  • Pollutants irritate the nose, throat, and lungs
  • Adds to acid rain
  • Exploration damages natural areas

12
  • Renewable resources
  • Have less damage impact on the environment
  • Location is a drawback
  • Pollution from super heated calcium-rich
    geothermal water can pollute lakes and streams

13
Using Resources Wisely
  • Conservation
  • May include research that improves efficiency of
    the peoples use of resources
  • Find better ways of controlling the environmental
    impact of mining
  • Topsoil can be removed before mining them
  • Reducing gasoline consumption
  • Better insulation of homes
  • Reducing the use and recycling can help make
    metal and nonmetal resources last longer

14
Legislation
  • E.P.A. Environmental Protection Agency monitors
    and sets environmental standards
  • Pollution Prevention Act of 1990 was designed to
    control pollution and to encourage the
    conservation of energy, water and other natural
    resources
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