Chapter 13 Human Impacts of the Environment
Earth’s Environmental Systems
Ecosphere
Thin zone of
Air
Water
Earth
Living matter
Structure of the ecosphere is not eternal and unchanging
Composed of four layers of overlapping, interrelated parts:
Atmosphere
A thin blanket of air enveloping the Earth
Hydrosphere
Consists of the perpetually moving surface and subsurface waters
Water is essential to all life
Water plays a critical role in moderating the Earth’s climate
Hydrologic cycle
Changing form from vapor to liquid to ice/snow and back again
Lithosphere
The upper reaches of the Earth’s crust
Contains soils and support for plant life, animals, and other natural needs for living organisms
Biosphere
Consists of the living matter of plants and animals
Biomes
Dividents of the Biosphere which are biological communities
Established by the pattern of global climates
Ecosystems
Self-contained, self-regulating, and interacting communities adapted to local combinations of climate, topography, soil, and drainage conditions
Contain smaller, more specialized organisms
Impacts on the Atmosphere
Ecosystems have long felt the destructive hand of humans and the cultural landscapes they made
At a global scale, however, human impact was minimal
Air pollution was at first local in the form of
Household air pollution
Negative health effects from indoor cooking over open fires
Air Pollution and Acid Precipitation
Every day, thousands of tons of pollutants are discharged into the air by natural events and human actions
Atmospheric pollution can and does result in nature from
Ash from volcanic eruptions
Marsh gases
Smoke from naturally occurring forest fires
Windblown dust
These pollutants are of low volume and are widely dispersed in the atmosphere
Pollutants come primarily from burning fossil fuels
Coal
Oil
Natural gas
In power plants, factories, furnaces, and vehicles
Fires deliberately set to clear
Forests
Grasslands
They do this for agricultural expansion or shifting cultivation clearing and burning
Air pollution is a global problem today
The pollution shroud in and around India the researchers find it reduces sunlight enough to cut rice yields across much of the country
Air pollution worsened in the developing countries of South, Southeast, and East Asia
When acids from all sources are washed out of the air by
Rain
Snow
Fog
The result is acid precipitation
The Trouble with Ozone
Air pollution is the cause of the destruction of the Earth’s ozone layer
Ozone
Reactive molecule consisting of three oxygen atoms rather than the two of normal oxygen
In either hemisphere, ozone depletion has identical adverse effects
Ozone problems lead to greater exposure to UV radiation and it increases the incidence of skin cancer and, by suppressing bodily defense mechanisms, increases risk from a variety of infectious diseases
Global Climate Change
Humans have significantly altered the chemical composition of the atmosphere
Human activities have increased the concentrations of three greenhouse gases
Carbon dioxide
Methane
Nitrous oxide
Intensifying the natural greenhouse effect which leads to global climate change
The Earth would be substantially colder and its temperatures would fluctuate wildly if the greenhouse effect did not exist
Carbon dioxide gets most of the media coverage
Nitrous oxide emissions are a byproduct of increased fertilizer use
This is a consequence of agricultural expansion and intensification
Humans have always managed to leave their mark on the landscapes that they occupy
Search for minerals and other natural resources has altered whole landscapes
Tropical Deforestation
Forest clearing accompanied the development of agriculture and spread of people throughout
Europe
Central Asia
Middle East
India
Desertification
Humans are negatively affecting the arid and semiarid regions of the world
Soil Erosion
Soil
Complex mixture of rock particles, inorganic mineral matter, organic material, living organisms, air, and water
Soil is constantly being formed by the physical and chemical decomposition of rock material and by the decay of organic matter
Water is essential to all life on Earth
Our bodies are about 60 percent water and about 70 percent of the Earth’s surface is covered by water
Water Availability
Distribution, its availability, and its quality is the problem with water
Only about 1 percent of all water is available as liquid freshwater
Populations are rising in many regions where water supplies are limited
Transboundary river basins
Basins straddling two or more countries
Water Use and Abuse
Water supplies and food supplies are intimately connected
In dry climates, rivers and lakes have shrunk or even disappeared due to irrigation demands
Environmental pollution
When humans introduce wastes into the biosphere in kinds and amounts that the natural system cannot neutralize or recycle
Human wastes often contain infectious agents that cause waterborne diseases such as
Cholera
Dysentery
typhoid fever
The most enduring of landscape evidence of human occupancy is the garbage produced and discarded by every society
Solid Wastes
Solid wastes are generally landfills or incineration
Americans produce garbage and other municipal waste at a rate of about 2 kilograms per person per day
When the populations grow, the incomes rise, and the consumption patterns change
This means the volume of disposable materials continues to expand
The fastest-growing category of waste is electronic waste
Toxic Wastes
Problems of municipal and household solid-waste management are having
Disposal of hazardous chemical or radioactive wastes
10 percent of industrial waste materials are hazardous chemical or radioactive wastes
Disposed in highly regulated incinerators or lined landfills designed to prevent the release of contaminants into the environment
Radioactive Wastes
A facility that uses or produces radioactive materials generates at least low-level waste material where the radioactivity will decay to safe levels in 100 years or less
Examples of facilities that produce low-level radioactive waste materials
Nuclear power plants
Industries that manufacture radiopharmaceuticals
Smoke alarms
Consumer goods
Research establishments
Universities
Hospitals
Exporting Wastes
There is no true “away”
Governments or industries have proposed to build
Landfills
Hazardous waste incinerators
Nuclear waste repositories
Communities
Organization of African Unity (OAU) adopted a 1988 resolution condemning the dumping of all foreign wastes on that continent
80% of e-waste collected in the United States for recycling is exported to areas such as
China
India
Pakistan
Nigeria
Mexico
Humans have transformed the Earth’s landscapes since the end of the last glaciation
Diverse systems of exploitation of the environment were developed in and diffused from distinctive cultural hearths
Spatial interaction among regions did not halt the creation of distinctive regional subsystems of culture
Human impact on the environment has shifted scales from the local or regional to the continental and global scales
Things that can offer resources to guide human behavior in ways that are more respectful of the Earth
Religions
Belief systems
Cultures
We can use scientific and technological advances to monitor and restore the environment
Earth’s Environmental Systems
Ecosphere
Thin zone of
Air
Water
Earth
Living matter
Structure of the ecosphere is not eternal and unchanging
Composed of four layers of overlapping, interrelated parts:
Atmosphere
A thin blanket of air enveloping the Earth
Hydrosphere
Consists of the perpetually moving surface and subsurface waters
Water is essential to all life
Water plays a critical role in moderating the Earth’s climate
Hydrologic cycle
Changing form from vapor to liquid to ice/snow and back again
Lithosphere
The upper reaches of the Earth’s crust
Contains soils and support for plant life, animals, and other natural needs for living organisms
Biosphere
Consists of the living matter of plants and animals
Biomes
Dividents of the Biosphere which are biological communities
Established by the pattern of global climates
Ecosystems
Self-contained, self-regulating, and interacting communities adapted to local combinations of climate, topography, soil, and drainage conditions
Contain smaller, more specialized organisms
Impacts on the Atmosphere
Ecosystems have long felt the destructive hand of humans and the cultural landscapes they made
At a global scale, however, human impact was minimal
Air pollution was at first local in the form of
Household air pollution
Negative health effects from indoor cooking over open fires
Air Pollution and Acid Precipitation
Every day, thousands of tons of pollutants are discharged into the air by natural events and human actions
Atmospheric pollution can and does result in nature from
Ash from volcanic eruptions
Marsh gases
Smoke from naturally occurring forest fires
Windblown dust
These pollutants are of low volume and are widely dispersed in the atmosphere
Pollutants come primarily from burning fossil fuels
Coal
Oil
Natural gas
In power plants, factories, furnaces, and vehicles
Fires deliberately set to clear
Forests
Grasslands
They do this for agricultural expansion or shifting cultivation clearing and burning
Air pollution is a global problem today
The pollution shroud in and around India the researchers find it reduces sunlight enough to cut rice yields across much of the country
Air pollution worsened in the developing countries of South, Southeast, and East Asia
When acids from all sources are washed out of the air by
Rain
Snow
Fog
The result is acid precipitation
The Trouble with Ozone
Air pollution is the cause of the destruction of the Earth’s ozone layer
Ozone
Reactive molecule consisting of three oxygen atoms rather than the two of normal oxygen
In either hemisphere, ozone depletion has identical adverse effects
Ozone problems lead to greater exposure to UV radiation and it increases the incidence of skin cancer and, by suppressing bodily defense mechanisms, increases risk from a variety of infectious diseases
Global Climate Change
Humans have significantly altered the chemical composition of the atmosphere
Human activities have increased the concentrations of three greenhouse gases
Carbon dioxide
Methane
Nitrous oxide
Intensifying the natural greenhouse effect which leads to global climate change
The Earth would be substantially colder and its temperatures would fluctuate wildly if the greenhouse effect did not exist
Carbon dioxide gets most of the media coverage
Nitrous oxide emissions are a byproduct of increased fertilizer use
This is a consequence of agricultural expansion and intensification
Humans have always managed to leave their mark on the landscapes that they occupy
Search for minerals and other natural resources has altered whole landscapes
Tropical Deforestation
Forest clearing accompanied the development of agriculture and spread of people throughout
Europe
Central Asia
Middle East
India
Desertification
Humans are negatively affecting the arid and semiarid regions of the world
Soil Erosion
Soil
Complex mixture of rock particles, inorganic mineral matter, organic material, living organisms, air, and water
Soil is constantly being formed by the physical and chemical decomposition of rock material and by the decay of organic matter
Water is essential to all life on Earth
Our bodies are about 60 percent water and about 70 percent of the Earth’s surface is covered by water
Water Availability
Distribution, its availability, and its quality is the problem with water
Only about 1 percent of all water is available as liquid freshwater
Populations are rising in many regions where water supplies are limited
Transboundary river basins
Basins straddling two or more countries
Water Use and Abuse
Water supplies and food supplies are intimately connected
In dry climates, rivers and lakes have shrunk or even disappeared due to irrigation demands
Environmental pollution
When humans introduce wastes into the biosphere in kinds and amounts that the natural system cannot neutralize or recycle
Human wastes often contain infectious agents that cause waterborne diseases such as
Cholera
Dysentery
typhoid fever
The most enduring of landscape evidence of human occupancy is the garbage produced and discarded by every society
Solid Wastes
Solid wastes are generally landfills or incineration
Americans produce garbage and other municipal waste at a rate of about 2 kilograms per person per day
When the populations grow, the incomes rise, and the consumption patterns change
This means the volume of disposable materials continues to expand
The fastest-growing category of waste is electronic waste
Toxic Wastes
Problems of municipal and household solid-waste management are having
Disposal of hazardous chemical or radioactive wastes
10 percent of industrial waste materials are hazardous chemical or radioactive wastes
Disposed in highly regulated incinerators or lined landfills designed to prevent the release of contaminants into the environment
Radioactive Wastes
A facility that uses or produces radioactive materials generates at least low-level waste material where the radioactivity will decay to safe levels in 100 years or less
Examples of facilities that produce low-level radioactive waste materials
Nuclear power plants
Industries that manufacture radiopharmaceuticals
Smoke alarms
Consumer goods
Research establishments
Universities
Hospitals
Exporting Wastes
There is no true “away”
Governments or industries have proposed to build
Landfills
Hazardous waste incinerators
Nuclear waste repositories
Communities
Organization of African Unity (OAU) adopted a 1988 resolution condemning the dumping of all foreign wastes on that continent
80% of e-waste collected in the United States for recycling is exported to areas such as
China
India
Pakistan
Nigeria
Mexico
Humans have transformed the Earth’s landscapes since the end of the last glaciation
Diverse systems of exploitation of the environment were developed in and diffused from distinctive cultural hearths
Spatial interaction among regions did not halt the creation of distinctive regional subsystems of culture
Human impact on the environment has shifted scales from the local or regional to the continental and global scales
Things that can offer resources to guide human behavior in ways that are more respectful of the Earth
Religions
Belief systems
Cultures
We can use scientific and technological advances to monitor and restore the environment