Environmental Science Final Exam
surface mining
(close to the surface of the ground by simply digging down to expose it) a form of mining that involves removing soil and rock that overlays a mineral deposit close to the surface in order to access that deposit
strip mining
(method of choice) a surface mining method that accesses coal from deposits close to the surface on level ground, one section at a time
potency, persistence, solubility
3 key factors that determine how dangerous a toxic substance is
carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, ground-level ozone, particulate matter, lead
6 criteria air pollutants
minerals
A naturally occurring chemical compound that exists as a solid with a predictable, three-dimensional, repeating structure.
Clean Air Act
CAA
Environmental Protection Agency
EPA
energy return on energy investment
EROEI
volatile organic compounds
VOC
dose-response curve
a graph that shows the strength of an effect of a substance at different doses of that substance
persistence
a measure of how resistant a chemical is to degradation (how easily it breaks down)
proven reserves
a measure of the amount of a fossil fuel that is economically feasible to extract from a known deposit using current technology
eutrophication
a process in which excess nutrients in aquatic ecosystems feed biological productivity, ultimately lowering the oxygen content in the water
clean coal
a process that chemically removes some of coal's contaminants before burning it. In most common clean coal technology, coal is converted to a gaseous fuel that burns more efficiently and releases fewer air pollutants
ground-level ozone
a secondary pollutant that forms when some of the pollutants released during fossil fuel combustion react with atmospheric oxygen in the presence of sunlight
mountaintop removal (MTR)
a surface mining technique that involves using explosives to blast away the top of a mountain to expose the coal seam underneath; the waste rock and rubble is deposited in a nearby valley
fossil fuels
a variety of hydrocarbons formed from the remains of dead organisms (oil, natural gas, coal) and are considered nonrenewable
lead
additive to gasoline, paint, and other solvents (source: lead-based paint in older homes and from other countries; leaded gasoline; soil erosion and volcanoes)
widely distributed and fairly abundant supply, low geopolitical conflict, energy-rich fuel, safe to transport and store, affordable
advantages of coal
energy-rich fuel, versatile fuel: generate electricity, heating and cooking, vehicle fuel, lowest air pollution, no ash produced when burned, raw material for a wide variety of industrial products
advantages of natural gas
energy-rich fuel, provides variety of liquid fuels that meet needs for vehicles, no ash produced when burned, can transport via pipeline or vehicle, raw materials for a wide variety of industrial products
advantages of oil
lower impact per person due to smaller homes and less traveling, higher energy efficiency in stacked housing than in freestanding buildings, more transportation options which lessens the need for personal vehicles, closer proximity to destinations, which makes walking viable options, more job opportunities, more services for citizens
advantages of urbanization
chronic effect
adverse reaction that happens only after repeated long-term exposure to low doses of a toxic substance
acute effect
adverse reaction that occurs very rapidly after exposure to a toxic substance has occurred
secondary air pollutant
air pollutants formed when primary air pollutants react with one another or with other chemicals in the air
primary air pollutant
air pollutants released directly from both mobile sources and stationary sources
air pollution
any material added to the atmosphere that harms living organisms, affects the climate, or impacts structures
toxic substances
chemicals that can harm living organisms
Environmental impacts: atmospheric ozone depletion, climate change, plants: tissue damage, impaired growth, animals: impaired health, reduced reproductive strategies, eutrophication of waterbodies, reduced visibility, damage to structures health impacts: eye, nose, throat irritation, respiratory infections, wheezing, coughing, shortness of breath, headache, cardiovascular and respiratory disease, neurological disorders, premature births and low birth weight, impaired lung development, cancer, diabetes, premature death societal impacts: low income and minority communities most likely to be affected, lost income from missed work, health costs to community
consequences of air pollution
green building
construction and operational designs that promote resource and energy efficiency and provide a better environment for occupants
conventional reserves
deposits of crude oil or natural gas that can extracted by vertical drilling and pumping
unconventional reserves
deposits of oil or natural gas that cannot be recovered with traditional oil/gas wells but may be recoverable using alternative techniques
carbon (as CO2) is released by producers and consumers during cellular respiration and is returned to the atmosphere --> carbon is removed from the atmosphere during photosynthesis and is incorporated into plants, which use or store it --> carbon compounds enter the soil --> both producers and consumers (including decomposers) release carbon (as CO2) during cellular respiration, and it finds its way back to the atmosphere
describe the carbon cycle
nonrenewable, finite resource, hazardous air pollution, most carbon-intensive fossil fuel to burn, water pollution from mining and burning coal, habitat and property destruction from mining, biodiversity loss from mining, flooding risk increased due to loss of vegetation from surface mining, health issues in miners and community members living near mines.
disadvantages of coal
nonrenewable, methane is a potent greenhouse gas, produces CO2 emissions, water pollution, habitat destruction, biodiversity loss, hazardous chemical, difficult to ship.
disadvantages of natural gas
nonrenewable, geopolitical tensions from unequal distribution of reserves, air pollution, water pollution, habitat destruction (extraction and spills), biodiversity loss, dangerous to ship. occupational and community hazard
disadvantages of oil
dependence on food and resource inputs from outside the city, concentrated wastes that have to be transported away, urban heat island effect, traffic congestion and its associated air pollution, possibly higher disease and violence, higher cost of living, less green space
disadvantages of urbanization
sanitary landfills
disposal sites that seal in trash at the top and bottom to prevent its release into the atmosphere; the sites are lined on the bottom, and trash is dumped in and covered with soil daily
causes cancer by causing mutations in DNA (ex: components in tobacco smoke, paints)
effects and examples of carcinogen
interferes with the hormones of the body (ex: many chemicals in plastics such as bisphenol A, some pesticides, glycol ethers)
effects and examples of endocrine disruptors
causes localized damage to tissue such as skin or eyes (ex: household cleaners, chlorine, fabric softeners)
effects and examples of irritant
causes direct damage upon exposure at a high enough dose (ex: pesticides, cleaning solutions, drain cleaner, pharmaceuticals, antifreeze)
effects and examples of poison
can cause an allergic reaction to develop (ex: formaldehyde, latex)
effects and examples of sensitizer
causes birth defects (ex: alcohol, components in tobacco smoke, some pharmaceuticals, heavy metals)
effects and examples of teratogen
1. coal is sent to a furnace, where it is burned to produce heat. 2. water is heated in pipes that pass through the boiler 3. steam is produced and funneled to a turbine 4. as the turbine spins, magnets spin alongside copper wire, generating electricity 5. transformer: voltage is ramped up before being sent out onto the grid. Transformers on power poles step voltage down before it enters your home
electricity production from coal
nuclear energy
energy in an atom; can be released when an atom is split (fission) or combines with another atom (fusion)
dead zones
eutrophication can lead to this
open mines, industrial air pollution from smokestacks, cropland and animal pasture, construction sites
examples of non-point source
sewage treatment plant, animal feedlot and waste lagoon, industrial waste or heated water discharge
examples of point source pollution
synergistic effects
exposure to two or more chemicals that has a greater effect than the sum of their individual effects would predict
antagonistic effects
exposure to two or more chemicals that has a lesser effect than the sum of their individual effects would predict
additive effects
exposure to two or more chemicals that has an effect equivalent to the sum of their individual effects
ground-level ozone
formed from reactions between NO and VOCs in the presence of sunlight (source: vehicles, manufactured products and industry)
carbon monoxide
from incomplete combustion of any carbon-based fuel (source: vehicles, forest fires, and volcanoes)
sulfur dioxide
from natural sources and fossil fuel combustion (source: industry, volcanoes, and dust)
nitrogen oxides
from the reaction of nitrogen in fuel or air with oxygen at high temps. (source: vehicles, industry, and nitrification by soil and aquatic bacteria)
energy security
having access to enough reliable and affordable energy sources to meet one's needs
smog
hazy air pollution that contains a variety of pollutants
NOAEL (no observed adverse effect level)
highest dose where no effect is seen
coal is formed over long periods of time as plant matter is buried in an oxygen-poor environment and subjected to high heat and pressure. Places with substantial coal deposits that are retrievable with current technology are called coal reserves
how is coal formed
anything that increases infiltration can help avoid stormwater problems
how to minimize stormwater runoff
tight oil
light (low-density) oil in shale rock deposits of very low permeability; extracted by fracking
poison, irritant, sensitizer, carcinogen, teratogen, endocrine disruptor
list some types of toxic substances
LOAEL (lowest observed adverse effect level)
lowest dose where an unacceptable effect is first seen
EROEI
measure of the net energy from an energy source (the energy in the source minus the energy required to get it, process it, ship it, and then use it)
energy independence
meeting all of one's energy needs without importing any energy
carbon cycle
movement of carbon through biotic and abiotic parts of an ecosystem. Carbon cycles via photosynthesis and cellular respiration as well as in and out of other reservoirs, such as oceans, soil, rock, and atmosphere. It is also released by human actions such as the burning of fossil fuels.
fossil fuels
nonrenewable carbon-based resources (ex: coal, oil, natural gas)
long ago, some marine organisms died and were buried in sediment. This burial excluded oxygen, and decomposition was greatly slowed down. As sediments accumulated, the partially decomposed buried biomass was subjected to high heat and pressure. Over the course of millions of years, it was chemically converted to oil or natural gas. Since oil and natural gas are lighter than water, they flow upward in porous reservoir rock until stopped by a layer of dense cap rock. We tap these deposits by drilling into the porous rock reservoirs.
oil and natural gas fuel formation
non-point source pollution
origin of pollution is not easily identifiable; runoff that enters the water from overland flow
particulate matter (PM)
particles or droplets small enough to remain aloft in the air for long periods of time
transboundary pollution
pollution that is produced in one area but falls in a different state or nation
cap-and-trade program
regulations that set an upper limit for pollution emissions, issue permits to producers for a portion of that amount, and allow producers that release less than their allotment to sell permits to those who exceeded their allotment
tar sands
sand or clay formations that contain a heavy-density crude oil; extracted by surface mining
subsurface mining
sites where tunnels are dug underground to access mineral resources
smart growth
strategies that help create walkable communities with lower environmental impacts
solubility
the ability of a substance to dissolve in a water or fat-based liquid or gas
water pollution
the addition of any substance to a body of water that might degrade its quality
carbon footprint
the amount of carbon released to the atmosphere by a person, company, nation, or activity
bioaccumulation
the build-up of a substance in the tissues of an organism over the course of its lifetime
energy
the capacity to do work
LD50 (lethal dose 50%)
the dose of a substance that would kill 50% of the test population
potency
the dose size required for a chemical to cause harm
fracking
the extraction of oil or natural gas from dense rock formations by creating fractures in the rock and then flushing out the oil/gas with pressurized fluid
biomagnification
the increased concentration of substances in the tissue of animals at successively higher levels of the food chain (the fact that animals higher on the food chain bioaccumulate more chemicals than the organisms they eat)
urban heat island effect
the phenomenon in which urban areas are warmer than the surrounding countryside due to pavement, dark surfaces, closed-in spaces, and high energy use
carbon capture and sequestration (CCS)
the process of removing carbon from fuel combustion emissions or other sources and storing it to prevent its release into the atmosphere;
mine reclamation
the process of restoring a damaged natural area to a less damaged state. US federal law requires that after a surface coal mine ceases operations, the land must be restored to close to its original state (however, mountaintop removal mining sites can never return to their original state)
particulate matter
tiny airborne particles or droplets, smaller than 44 micrometers. The smaller the particle, the more dangerous it is for living things (source: combustion of any fuel or activity that produces dust)
stationary source: electricity/heat
use of coal
stationary source: electricity/heat; also used in vehicles
use of natural gas
stationary source: electricity; also used in nuclear submarines and ships
use of nuclear gas
mobile: vehicles; also used for electricity or heat
use of oil/petroleum
placer mining
used when sediments contain heavy minerals or heavy metals like gold. Sediments can be dredged from rivers or mixed with water and then sent through a sluice, the heavier material will fall and be trapped
open-pit mining
used when the top of a fairly deep vertical or irregularly shaped ore deposit is found close to the surface
effluent
wastewater discharged into the environment
storm runoff
water from precipitation that flows over the surface of the land
point source pollution
water pollution whose discharge source can be clearly identified
leachate
water that carries dissolved substances (often contaminated) that can percolate the soil
trees, rain barrel captures runoff from roof, redirected downspout, curb cutouts reduce street runoff by diverting it to the ground, storm drain, rain gardens capture gutter and lawn runoff, green roof
ways to increase infiltration of stormwater