GEOG 2200 Bio/Man-Made Hazards (Exam 3)

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aral sea

*possibly the worst man-made environmental disaster in history* once the world's 4th larges lake, now dead and drying up result of irrigation for cotton farms two main rivers no longer feed it

seveso, italy chemical explosion

1976 chemical plant explosion release TCDD (dioxin) large-scale contamination gradual understanding of health effects recovery achieved through export of contamination, compensation of victims a long clean-up disaster (9 years later) mismanaged toxic release exported waste is externalization of environmental costs residents and local authorities do not suspect that the chemical plant was a source of risk most people do not know wha type of production process and chemical substances were produced at the plant

ignitability, corrosively, reactivity, toxicity

4 characteristics associated with hazardous waste

reducing threats, detecting threats, reducing vulnerability, improving responses

4 fundamental issues with mitigating terrorism

chernobyl nuclear accident

April 25-26, 1986 *world's worst nuclear power plant accident* released and est 100-150 billion BQ of radiation into the atmosphere 135000 people evacuated 1 million people monitored, 600,000 get bi-annual checkups

chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear threats

CBRN hazards

universal wastes

EPA classification batteries, pesticides, mercury-containing equipment (thermostats), lamps (fluorescent bulbs) (hazardous wastes)

mixed wastes

EPA classification waste that contains both radioactive and hazardous waste components (hazardous waste)

characteristic wastes

EPA classification wastes that do not meet any of the listings above (listed wastes) but exhibit ignitability, corrosively, reactivity, or toxicity (hazardous wastes)

listed wastes

EPA classification wastes that the EPA had determined are hazardous Includes F-list (wastes from common manufacturing and industrial processes), K-list (wastes from specific industries), and P- and U-lists (wastes from commercial chemical products). (hazardous wastes)

exxon valdez oil spill

March 24, 1989 *second largest spill in US history* Prince William Sound, AK 11 million gallons 9000 miles of shoreline in spill region top 10 globally in terms of environment the worst spill in terms of environment impact -remote location -miles of rugged shoreline -abundance of wildfire

lessons learned from three mile island

TMI reactor 2 permanently shut down cleanup efforts took a decade to complete public voted no to restart TMI 1 development of new nuclear power plants in the US ceased despite its record, the US public general fears and opposed nuclear power in their communities

environmental degradation

a decrease in the quality or provision of environmental goods or services human modification of the environment/landscape, environmental stress

acid rain

a mixture of wet and dry deposition from the atmosphere containing higher than normal amounts of nitric and sulfuric acids

acute accidents

accidental release of chemical hazards industrial accidents

international terrorism

acts that are violations of criminal laws of US transcends national boundaries

fixed site

agriculture industrial facility household chemicals

alpha radiation

alpha particles consists of two protons and two neutrons, the penetrating power of alpha radiation is low and can be stopped with a sheet of paper (nuclear hazards)

dose

amount of radiation energy exposed to or absorbed by a subject 500 R in 5 hours is lethal for humans (nuclear hazards)

biological hazard (biohazard)

an agent of biological origin that has the capacity to produce deleterious effects on humans (i.e., microorganisms, toxins and allergens derived from those organisms; and allergens and toxins derived from higher plants and animals) an organism or a by-product from an organism that is harmful or potentially harmful to other living things, primarily human beings

toxic spills and releases

any chemical that enters the environment (chemical hazards)

radioactive material

any material that contains radioactive (unstable) atoms (nuclear hazards)

threshold effects

appear after a certain level of radiation exposure is reached and enough cells have been damaged to make the effect apparent occur when levels of radiation exposure are tens, hundreds, or thousands of time higher than background, and usually when the exposure is over a very short time, such as a few minutes (nuclear hazards)

deepwater horizon oil spill

april 20-july 15 2010 *largest US oil spill* explosion on deepwater horizon drilling rig 11 deaths 17 injuries leaking well 5000 feet below surface 35-60k of barrels leaked per day largest marine oil in industry's history affected shorelines from TX to FL impact: wildfire, fishing and oil industry, tourism, ocean floor

27819

average annual impact of industrial accidents: affected

490

average annual impact of industrial accidents: deaths

5098

average annual impact of industrial accidents: homeless

1904

average annual impact of industrial accidents: injuries

34821

average annual impact of industrial accidents: total affected

321216

average annual impact of industrial accidents: total damage

techocentric mitigation

belief that environmental problems can be solved or accommodated within current technical, social, political, and scientific frameworks science and technology can provide solutions to environmental issues

bacteria, viruses, animals, plants, humans

biohazard sources

level 2

biosafety level agents associated with human disease

level 1

biosafety level agents not known to cause disease

level 4

biosafety level dangerous/exotic agents of life threatening nature

level 3

biosafety level indigenous/exotic agents associated with human disease and with potential for aerosol transmission

blister agents, vesicants

blistering of eyes, respiratory tract, and skin on contact (chemical hazards)

caustics (acids)

burn or corned people's skin, eyes, and mucus membranes (lining of the nose, mouth, throat, and lungs) on contact (chemical hazards)

non threshold effects

can occur at lower levels of radiation exposure (nuclear hazards)

vomiting agents

cause nausea and vomiting (chemical hazards)

manufacturing, consumption of fossil fuels, volcanic eruptions, transportation

causes of acid rain

large scale clearing overharvest pesticides draining and filling of wetlands destructive fishing practices air pollution conversion of wild lands

causes of biodiversity loss

national response center

chemical and oil spills (accidental)

photochemical smog

chemical reaction of sunlight, nitrogen oxides, and VOCs resulting in airborne particles (particulate matter) and ground-level ozone

inhalation, skin contact, ingestion

common pathways radiation can enter humans

viruses, medical waste, toxins (created by a particular organism or microorganism)

common types of biological hazards

beta radiation

consist of beta particles (equivalent to electrons); have higher penetrating power than alpha radiation - can be stopped by a sheet of aluminum (nuclear hazards)

metals

consist of metallic poisons (chemical hazards)

ozone layer

contains ozone gas in the stratosphere where it protects life on Earth from the sun's harmful UV rays

lessons learned from 9 11

creation of dept of homeland security overhaul of nation's emergency management system and procedures (national incident management system) stricter immigration and border controls problems with intelligence community to share and connect information fight against terrorism wars: afghanistan and iraq

toxic alcohols

damage the heart, kidneys, and nervous system (chemical hazards)

organic solvents

damage the tissue of living things by dissolving fats and oils (chemical hazards)

global industrial accidents (1900-2015)

deaths: 56,892 injuries: 220,957 affected: 3,227,004 total affected: 4,039,351 homeless: 591,390 total damage: $43,061,040

bhopal, india accident

dec 9, 1984 *greatest industrial disaster in history* union carbide pesticide plant approx 40 metric tons of methyl isocyanate released 2000-8000 dead, 100000 injuries 50000 remain disabled dense population towns surrounding the plant poorest people affected result of legal, technological, and human errors

anthrax attacks

domestic terrorism biological hazard used as a weapon started 9/18/2001 letters containing anthrax spores sent via mail 5 fatalities, 17 others affected

who is exposed, absorbed dose, type of radiation, rate of exposure, how much of body is exposed, specific organs exposed (tissue that divides rapidly are particularly sensitive - blood forming tissue)

effects of radiation depend on (nuclear hazards)

radiation

emission and propagation of energy in the form of rays or particles (light, heat, radio, nuclear) (nuclear hazards)

H1N1

example of biohazard from animals

anthrax

example of biohazard from bacteria

hepatitis C

example of biohazard from humans

rabies

example of biohazard from plants

avian influenza

example of biohazard from viruses

acid rain, smog, pollution, chronic diseases, waste disposal and landfills, environmental modification, loss of biodiversity and species extinction

examples of environmental degradation

Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act, 1986 Reduce emissions (Clean Air Act, 1963) Alternative energy Oil Pollution Act, 1990 Superfund (waste disposal) Aral Sea Rehabilitation Fund Emission trading Public Awareness

examples of hazard mitigation that were developed (acts, laws, public awareness, etc.)

production of chemical hazards

factories and urbanization

spatial extent, magnitude estimators, toxicity indicators

factors that influence the severity of a chemical release (chemical hazards)

aral sea impacts

fishing industry collapsed tourism industry collapsed agricultural difficulties flora and fauna disappearing human health problems from pesticides and fertilizers local climate change (colder, drier) salinization depopulation

toxic release inventory

fixed facility releases (including legal, chronic releases)

gamma radiation

gamma rays are waves - not particles - and have very high penetrating power; gamma rays can be stopped by thick layers of lead or concrete (nuclear hazards)

radioactive

giving off particular types of energy rays/particles through the spontaneous decay of the atomic nuclei, or through a controlled process (x-ray machine), nuclear radiation (nuclear hazards)

create fear, publicity for political, religious, and environmental causes, exploitation of the everyday

goals of terrorism

class 8

hazardous material placard corrosive substances

class 1

hazardous material placard explosives

class 3

hazardous material placard flammable liquids

class 4

hazardous material placard flammable solids

class 2

hazardous material placard gases

class 9

hazardous material placard miscellaneous

class 5

hazardous material placard oxidizing agents and organic peroxides

class 7

hazardous material placard radioactive substances

class 6

hazardous material placard toxic and infectious substances

9 11 attacks

hijacking of commercial flight in US 19 terrorist trained to fly jest and some lived in US for more than a year jets filled with fuel used as weapons over 2600 fatalities

chronic releases, acute accidents

how chemical hazards originate

50,000

how many species are dying per year

137

how many species become extinct per day

chernobyl human health effects

impact of radioactivity can be difficult to trace in population immediate deaths estimates of total deaths as a result controversial

acid lakes, kills trees, human health, corrosive, sinkholes

impacts associated with acid rain

pre cautionary principles

in the absence of scientific consensus on the risk, the burden of proof that it is not harmful falls on those who advocate taking action - this approach is often employed in ecocentric cultures

incapacitating agents

inability to think clearly or altered state of consciousness (possibly unconsciousness) (chemical hazards)

ddt

insecticide used to control insect-borne diseases level of DDT still detectable today carcinogen toxic to aquatic life, birds, etc. (bioaccumulation)

chronic release

intentional release of chemical hazards long-term low level releases, illegal disposal, use in war or terrorist activities

lessons learned from chernobyl nuclear accident

international cooperation for nuclear safety regulations and design -contamination does not respect political boundaries clear communication and information dissemination is crucial

riot control agents, tear gas

irritating agents normally used by law enforcement for crowd control or by individuals for protection (chemical hazards)

issues learned from bhopal, india accident

issues of jurisdiction weak international laws and little ability to prosecute pollution, industrial hazards, and multinational business regulations government of India passed the bhopal gas leak disaster (processing of claims) act of 1985

alpha radiation, beta radiation, gamma radiation

least to most penetrating power (nuclear hazards)

more energy

longer wavelengths (nuclear hazards)

three mile island

march 28, 1979 10 miles from Harrisburg, PA partial reactor meltdown cause combination of technical malfunction and human error rate ad 5/7 on the international nuclear event scale increase in public fear and distrust mechanical failure of pumps pressure release valve opened and then failed to properly close coolant leak human error core overheats and meltdown began

film badge or dosimeter

measures personnel exposure in rems or sieverts (nuclear hazards)

gray, Gy

measures the absorbed radiation dose or the energy absorbed per unit mass effects on tissue vary depending on type of radiation (nuclear hazards)

seivert, Sv

measures the biological effect of absorbed radiation it is therefore the standard measure of biological effects of radiation (nuclear hazards)

explosives and weapons

most common type of terrorist attack

reactivity

national fire protection agency 704 standard 0 = stable 4 = may detonate

fire hazard

national fire protection agency 704 standard 0 = will not burn 4 = below 73F

health hazard

national fire protection agency 704 standard 0-4 0 = normal material 4 = deadly

special hazard

national fire protection agency 704 standard OX = oxidizer ACID ALK = alkali CORR = corrosive W with cross thru = use NO WATER Radioactive

love canal

neighborhood in Niagara Falls, NY canal built for water diversion in 1800s (hydropower, shipping) abandoned due to the great depression and technological advancements Hooker Company had control of canal industrial dump Niagara Falls board of education buys land for $1 residential development (miscarriages, birth defects, asthma, etc.) president declares deferral emergency, state of emergency families relocated

lessons still to be learned from deepwater horizon oil still

no clue of combined impacts of hurricane and oil spill long term impacts unknown total affected are unknown underwater oil plumes and seafloor oil use of dispersants

5200

number of animal species facing extinction

34000

number of plant species facing extinction

cosmic, gamma, x-ray, ultraviolet, visible light, infrared, microwaves, radio

order of the electromagnetic spectrum (nuclear hazards)

air, animal contact, food and water contamination, person to person

pathways of infection (biohazards)

10-20

percentage of species expected to be lost in the next 50 years

blood agents

poisons affecting the body by being absorbed into the blood (chemical hazards)

biotoxins

poisons from plants or animals (chemical hazards)

toxicity indicators

potential for producing illness (chemical hazards)

long acting anticoagulants

prevent blood from clotting properly (chemical hazards)

nerve agents

prevent the nervous system from working properly (chemical hazards)

CO and Nix (vehicle combustion), methane and VOCs

primary pollutants typically associated with photochemical smog

right to know act

provide information about possible chemical exposures to the public requires a facility to document, notify, and report information

national fire protection agency 704 standard

provides fire hazard, health hazard, special hazard, and reactivity information

cell dies, cell cannot reproduce, alteration of DNA (mutation, cancer)

radiation effects (nuclear hazards)

radioactive contamination

radioactive material that is in a form or location which may allow it to spread to unwanted locations (fixed, loose, airborne) (nuclear hazards)

bequerel, Bq

rate of radioactive decay from a source material measures the activity of the source (nuclear hazards)

electromagnetic radiation

refers to the larger family or wave-like phenomena and is the primary vehicle transporting energy through the vast reaches of the universe (nuclear hazards)

choking, lung, pulmonary agents

severe irritation or swelling of the respiratory tract (lining go the nose and throat, lungs) (chemical hazards)

lessons learned from seveso, italy chemical explosion

seveso directives -regulation and tracking of chemical hazards and right to know by communities passed -seveso disaster gives valuable comparative insight to the effects of agent orange on flora and fauna in vietnam

less energy

shorter wavelengths (nuclear hazards)

hazardous waste

solid waste that harms people or the environment

increases: Africa and Asia Constants: Americas and Europe Oceania: here and there

spatial prevalence between 1900 and 2007 (number of people killed by technological disasters by countries provided)

lessons learned from deepwater horizon oil spill

spill prevention restructuring of MMS -bureau of ocean energy management, regulation, and enforcement loss capped

lessons learned from love canal

superfund program spurred legislation and control essential problems not over today

half life

the amount of time for 1/2 of parent material to decay radioactive decay releases energy (nuclear hazards)

de minimis principles

the risk is so small that it can be ignored - this approach is often employed in technocentric societies

nuclear or radioactive hazard

the risk or danger to human health or the environment posed by ionizing radiation emanating from the atomic nuclei of a given substance, or the possibility of an uncontrolled explosion originating from a fusion or fission reaction of atomic nuclei

biodiversity

the totality of genes, species, and ecosystems in a region

safety standards and emergency protocol plans reporting requirements (right to know act) event reporting based on type of release: toxic release inventory national response center

tools used to monitor the handling of hazards

munitions explosion

top 10 industrial accidents number 1 Cali, Colombia 1956 2700 deaths

freighter grandcamps explosion

top 10 industrial accidents number 10 Texas City, United States 1947 561 deaths

gas leak pesticide plants

top 10 industrial accidents number 2 Bhopal, India 1984 2500 deaths

mine accident

top 10 industrial accidents number 3 Honkeiko, Manchuria, China 1942 1549 deaths

building collapse

top 10 industrial accidents number 4 Savar, Dhaka, Bangladesh 2013 1127 deahts

mine explosion

top 10 industrial accidents number 5 Courieres, France 1906 1099 deaths

oil pipeline explosion

top 10 industrial accidents number 6 Attiworo, Nigeria 1998 1082 deaths

military installation explosion

top 10 industrial accidents number 7 Al-Hillah, Iraq 1989 700 deaths

pipeline explosion

top 10 industrial accidents number 8 Acha-Oufa, Soviet Union 1989 607 deaths

nitrate manufacturing explosion

top 10 industrial accidents number 9 Oppau, Germany 1921 600 deaths

increase

trends of reported deaths between 1900 and 2015

increase

trends of reported disasters between 1900 and 2015

sulfuric acid (H2SO4) and nitric acid (HNO3)

two principle acids that make up acid rain

sub-national groups (not the army of a country)

type of groups commonly associated with terrorism

chemical, biological, explosive devices, cyber attacks, nuclear or radiological

type of weapon used in terrorism attacks

chemical spill, collapse, explosion, fire, gas leak, oil spill, poisoning, radiation

types of industrial accidents (chemical hazards)

rontgen, R

unit of measurement for radiation and radiation exposure, measures intensity of a gamma source (nuclear hazards)

terrorism

use of force against people (or property)

ecocentric mitigation

views humankind as part of a global ecosystem, subject to ecological laws which act as constraints to human action fundamental, radical changes in society needed to address environmental issues

domestic terrorism

violence based and operating entirely in the US

refrigerators, fire extinguishers, solvents, industrial chemicals

what everyday appliances use this man-made chemical

stratosphere

what layer of the atmosphere is the ozone layer located at

chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)

what man-made chemical is depleting the ozone layer

less than 5

what pH level is classified with acid rain

hazardous waste landfills

where hazardous waste is typically disposed or placed at

oil refineries, fireworks factories, chemical plants, military bases, mining, transportation

where industrial accidents occur (chemical hazards)

fixed site, transportation

where toxic spills and releases happen (chemical hazards)

humans

who is primarily responsible for environmental degradation

civilians, non combatants

who is terrorism aimed at


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