Mr King - Sustainability Unit - Slides & Textbook

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If you are in Lexington Public Schools and have Mr King as your teacher here is a flashcard deck of both the slides and textbook from 2026

Last updated 2:20 PM on 6/1/26
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115 Terms

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Star

A glowing ball of gas held together by its own gravity and powered by nuclear fusion in its core.

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Protostar

An early stage of a star that develops as a nebula contracts, flattens, spins faster, and heats up before nuclear fusion occurs.

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Nebula

A large cloud of gas and dust formed by the clumping and gravitational attraction of matter in space.

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Nuclear Fusion

The merging of elements to form a new element or substance, initiated by gravitational attraction at a high density core.

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Triple Alpha Process

The fusion of three alpha particles (He4He^4 nuclei) to form a carbon nucleus (12C^{12}C).

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Supernova (Type I)

An explosion occurring when a white dwarf in a binary system either collides with another white dwarf or pulls too much matter from its nearby star.

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Supernova (Type II)

An explosion caused when the outward pressure from nuclear fuel burning can no longer resist the inward squeeze of gravity in a star.

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Kilonova

A blast occurring when two neutron stars merge, creating an event 1,000 times brighter than a classical nova.

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Differentiation

A process where a mixture of materials separates out into constituent parts, such as the separation of Earth into crust, mantle, and core.

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Iron Catastrophe

The event where Earth became molten and heavy materials like iron and nickel sank toward the center after reaching iron's melting temperature.

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Inner Core

A dense sphere of solid iron and nickel at the center of the Earth.

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Outer Core

A layer of molten iron and nickel that surrounds the inner core of the Earth.

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Mantle

The mostly solid bulk of Earth's interior located between the core and the thin outer crust.

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Asthenosphere

The soft, slowly flowing layer of the upper mantle beneath the lithosphere that allows tectonic plates to move.

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Lithosphere

A rigid layer made up of the uppermost part of the mantle and the crust.

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Rock Cycle

A series of processes on the surface and inside Earth that slowly changes rocks from one kind to another.

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Endogenic Processes

Forces originating within Earth that affect its surface, such as plate tectonics and volcanic eruptions.

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Exogenic Processes

Forces generally originating in the atmosphere that shape Earth's surface, such as erosion by water, wind, or glaciers.

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Plate Tectonics

A theory describing how Earth's lithosphere is divided into rigid plates whose movements produce geological events and landforms.

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Convergent Boundary

A plate boundary where two plates move toward each other.

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Trench

A deep, steep-sided canyon in the ocean floor associated with subduction at a convergent boundary.

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Subduction

The process where an oceanic plate slides beneath another plate into the mantle and begins to melt.

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Divergent Boundary

A plate boundary where two plates move away from each other.

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Mid-Ocean Ridge

An underwater mountain chain where new ocean floor is formed at a divergent boundary.

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Transform Boundary

A plate boundary where two plates move past each other in opposite directions.

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Orogenesis

The collective processes that result in the formation of mountains.

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Partial Melting

The process where only some minerals in a rock melt to form magma while others remain solid due to different melting temperatures.

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Renewable Resource

A resource that can be replenished over a fairly short time span such as months, years, or decades.

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Nonrenewable Resource

A resource that takes millions of years to form and accumulate, such as fossil fuels and certain metals.

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Hydrothermal Solutions

Hot waters in the Earth's crust that move through rock to dissolve and precipitate minerals in fractures and cavities.

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Ore

A naturally occurring solid material from which a metal or valuable mineral can be profitably extracted.

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Percent Yield

The measure of the amount of ore as compared to the amount of rock removed, calculated as (Mass of Ore/Mass of Rock)×100(\text{Mass of Ore} / \text{Mass of Rock}) \times 100.

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Placer Deposit

A deposit formed when heavy minerals settle where a river current slows down.

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Acid Mine Drainage

Pollution caused when sulfuric acid and dissolved materials like lead or arsenic wash from mines into water systems.

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Reclamation

The process of restoring mined land to a natural or economically usable state.

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Geothermal Energy

Energy derived from steam or hot water produced from hot or molten underground rocks.

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Biomass Energy

Renewable energy derived from burning organic materials such as wood and alcohol.

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Tragedy of the Commons

A situation where individuals acting in their own self-interest deplete a shared resource, eventually causing everyone to suffer.

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Weathering

The breaking down and changing of rocks at or near the Earth's surface.

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Frost Wedging

A type of mechanical weathering where water freezes and expands in rock cracks, enlarging them over time.

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Exfoliation

Mechanical weathering caused by upward expansion where outer slabs of rock separate and break loose.

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Hydrolysis

Chemical weathering that occurs when water reacts with minerals like feldspar to produce clay and salts.

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Regolith

A layer of rock and mineral fragments produced by weathering that supports plant growth.

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Soil Texture

The proportions of different particle sizes (clay, silt, and sand) in soil.

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Primary Macronutrients

The three nutrients needed by plants in the highest concentrations: Nitrogen (N), Phosphorus (P), and Potassium (K).

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Humus

The organic matter in soil composed of living and dead things in various states of decomposition.

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Loam

The best soil texture for plant growth, providing a balance of water retention and nutrient storage.

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Soil Horizon

A specific zone or layer of soil divided based on variations in composition, texture, structure, and color.

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Topsoil (A Horizon)

The soil layer containing a mixture of mineral matter and organic matter; the lower limit for most plant roots.

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Eluviation

The removal of dissolved or suspended material from soil layers by water movement, typically forming the E Horizon.

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Soil Salinization

The excessive accumulation of water-soluble salts in soil resulting from evaporation.

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Ecology

The scientific study of how living things interact with each other and their environment.

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Community

All the populations of different species that live and interact with each other in a particular place.

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Biome

A region of Earth characterized by a particular climate and specific types of plant life.

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Abiotic Factor

A nonliving physical or chemical part of an ecosystem, such as humidity, salinity, or pH.

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Saprotroph

A decomposer that feeds on non-living organic matter by secreting digestive enzymes and absorbing the products.

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10% Rule

The principle that only about 10 percent of energy is passed upward from one trophic level to the next.

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Biomagnification

The increasing concentration of toxins in organisms as they ingest other plants or animals in which the toxins are dispersed.

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Competitive Exclusion Principle

States that two species cannot occupy the same niche in a habitat if they are competing for all the same resources.

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Carrying Capacity

The maximum sustainable size a population can reach in a given ecosystem.

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Density-Dependent Limiting Factor

A limiting factor that occurs when a population reaches a certain size, such as competition, predation, or disease.

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r-selected Species

Species characterized by numerous small offspring, short life spans, and rapid maturation, often thriving in disturbed habitats.

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K-selected Species

Species with relatively stable populations that produce few but large offspring and provide extended parental care.

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Primary Succession

Ecological succession that begins in an area where no soil is present, such as bare rock.

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Keystone Species

A species that has a disproportionately large impact on its ecosystem relative to its abundance.

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Invasive Species

Non-native species that spread and cause environmental, ecosystem, or economic damage often due to a lack of predators.

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Renewable Resource

A resource that can be replaced in nature at a rate equal to or faster than its rate of use, such as oxygen, water, or solar energy.

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Nonrenewable Resource

A resource that exists in a fixed amount or is used up faster than it can be replaced in nature, such as fossil fuels or metallic minerals.

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Ores

Naturally occurring solid materials from which a metal or valuable mineral can be profitably extracted.

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Open-pit mining

A form of surface mining where large quantities of soil and rock are removed to create a wide, terraced pit to access an ore body.

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Strip mining

A surface mining method where large machines remove strips of overlying soil and rock, known as overburden, to expose mineral deposits like coal.

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Mountaintop removal

A specialized mining method where explosives are used to remove the top of a mountain to reach coal seams located below the surface.

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Tailings

Waste rock that remains after mineral resources have been extracted and processed from ore.

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Percent Yield

The percentage of valuable material obtained from the total amount of ore mined, calculated as Percent Yield=(Amount of Valuable Mineral ExtractedTotal Amount of Ore Mined)×100\text{Percent Yield} = (\frac{\text{Amount of Valuable Mineral Extracted}}{\text{Total Amount of Ore Mined}}) \times 100.

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Smelting

A process where concentrated metal-bearing material is heated in a furnace to remove impurities and produce purified metal.

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Fossil Fuels

Nonrenewable energy resources formed from the remains of organisms that lived millions of years ago, containing carbon, nitrogen, and hydrogen.

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Fractional distillation

The process used in refineries where crude oil is heated and separated into different products, like gasoline and diesel, based on their boiling points.

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Hydraulic fracturing (Fracking)

A process where high-pressure water, sand, and chemicals are injected into rock formations to create cracks for natural gas to flow.

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Geothermal Energy

Thermal energy derived from heat within the Earth caused by residual heat from formation and ongoing radioactive decay.

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Photovoltaic systems

Systems that convert sunlight directly into electricity by exciting electrons within semiconductor materials.

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Acid Mine Drainage

The flow of acidic water into ecosystems caused by a chemical reaction between sulfur-bearing minerals, such as pyrite, with air and water during mining.

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Tragedy of the Commons

A situation where individuals overuse a shared, open-access resource for short-term gain, leading to the long-term depletion of that resource.

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Humus

A dark, nutrient-rich, stable fraction of soil organic matter formed from fully decomposed plant and animal material.

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Soil Texture

The relative proportions of sand, silt, and clay particles found in a soil sample.

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Carbon Sequestration

The process of capturing and storing atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2CO_{2}) within the soil or other reservoirs.

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Nitrogen Fixation

The process where certain bacteria in soil and plant roots convert atmospheric nitrogen gas (N2N_{2}) into ammonia or ammonium.

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Salinization

The buildup of salts in soil, often caused by improper irrigation practices, which interferes with plant growth and reduces fertility.

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Population

A group of individuals of the same species living in the same area at the same time.

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Community

All the different populations of species living and interacting in the same geographic area.

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Ecosystem

A biological community of interacting organisms and their physical, nonliving environment such as soil, water, and air.

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Mutualism

A symbiotic relationship in which both organisms involved benefit from the interaction.

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Commensalism

A symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits while the other is neither helped nor harmed.

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Parasitism

A symbiotic relationship where one organism, the parasite, benefits by harming another organism, the host.

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Carrying Capacity

The maximum number of individuals of a species that an environment can support for an extended period.

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Density-Dependent Limiting Factors

Limiting factors whose effects on a population increase as the population density rises, such as competition, predation, and disease.

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Density-Independent Limiting Factors

Limiting factors that affect a population regardless of its size, such as natural disasters like floods, droughts, or wildfires.

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Niche

The specific ecological role an organism plays within its ecosystem, including how it eats, survives, and interacts with others.

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Competitive Exclusion Principle

The ecological rule stating that two species cannot occupy the exact same niche in the same habitat indefinitely.

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Invasive Species

A nonnative species that spreads rapidly in a new ecosystem and causes environmental, economic, or ecological harm.

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Agricultural Revolution

A period beginning roughly 10,000 years ago when humans shifted from hunting and gathering to growing crops and domesticating animals.