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Published byIra Long Modified over 9 years ago
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Renewable and Nonrenewable Resources
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Resources What we require to live Natural Resources – Resources we get from earth – Examples: Air, Soil, Minerals, Metals, Plants, Animals, Water, Energy Synthetic – Resources that are man made – Examples: Clothing, Medicine, Alternative Energy, Food
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Natural Resources Uneven Distribution – Depends on past processes Location of buried sediments Disrupted by volcanic or hydrothermal activity – Depends on current processes Human consumption/use
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Uneven Distribution Humans often live where we can get as many of the resources as we can find
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Uneven Distribution If we live near resources we cannot find, we trade for them
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Human Population More humans = More resources used = More energy needed = More effort to reduce, reuse, recycle is needed
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Natural Resources – 2 Types Nonrenewable – Any resource that cannot be replenished / replaced within a human life span. These took millions of years to form and exist in fixed amounts in the earth – Examples: Fossil Fuels, Uranium (Nuclear), Minerals, Metal Renewable – Any resource that can be replenished / replaced within a human life span – Examples: Solar, Wind, Water, Geothermal, Biomass
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Nonrenewable Resource Formation
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Nonrenewable Resources – Fossil Fuels Advantages – Well Developed Used for decades – Cheap – Reliable Disadvantages – Contributes to global warming – Limited amounts – Environmental / ecosystem concerns
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Nonrenewable Resources – Nuclear Energy (Uranium) Advantages – Low operating costs – Low air pollution – High production of energy Disadvantages – High risks of an accident – Environmental contamination – Waste lasts 200 – 500 thousand years
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Switch from nonrenewable to renewable Technology – Increased technology Ex. Solar panels, wind turbines, etc – Decreased cost Regulations – Increased regulations/fines on pollution Encourages companies to shift to renewable resources – Needs to be fair and effective
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Renewable Resources Natural Resources that can be replenished / replaced within a human life span Examples – Solar – Wind – Water – Geothermal – Biomass
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Renewable Resources - Solar Energy from the sun is collected and converted into a useable form Solar Panels (Photovoltaic Cells) – Found on buildings and in technology (ex. calculators)
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Renewable Resources - Solar Advantages – Creates energy during the day – Saves money / Tax incentives – Pollution Free – Noise Free Disadvantages – Doesn’t work at night or when its overcast – Expensive – Requires land/area for panels
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Renewable Resources - Wind Energy from the wind is collected and turned into useable energy Examples: – Wind Turbines
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Renewable Resources - Wind Advantages – No pollution – Great potential – Renewable – Space-Efficient Disadvantages – Not consistent – Large upfront costs – Threat to wildlife – Loud – Ugly
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Renewable Resources - Hydropower Hydropower (water power) is power gained from the energy of falling water and running water Provides 1/5 of the worlds energy
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Renewable Resources - Hydropower Advantages – No pollution – Reliable – Flexible (changing water flow) – Safe Disadvantages – Harms wildlife (fish habitats) – Expensive – Droughts – Limited Reservoirs
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Renewable Resources - Geothermal Converts the heat of the earth to usable energy
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Renewable Resources - Geothermal Advantages – Pollution Free – Consistent – Little land needed Disadvantages – Requires large amounts of water – High construction costs – Difficult – Prime sites are location specific and far from cities
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Renewable Resources - Biomass Material from plants and animals is burned to produce energy – Examples include wood, corn, garbage, vegetable oil
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Renewable Resources - Biomass Advantages – Widely available – Abundant supply – Helps deal with waste Disadvantages – Requires a lot of energy with little gain – Leads to deforestation – Expensive – Creates pollution
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Renewable vs Nonrenewable Resources
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Renewable – Can be replenished/replaced within a human life span Nonrenewable – Cannot be replenished/replaced within a human life span. These took millions of years to form and exist in fixed amounts in the earth
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If renewable resources are better for the environment why do we use so many non-renewable resources? Established Easier
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Resources What we require to live Natural Resources – Resources we get from earth / found in nature – Includes organic materials – Examples: Air, Soil, Minerals, Metals, Plants, Animals, Water, Energy Synthetic – Resources that are man made – Often starts natural but humans try to make advances within the product – Examples: Clothing, Medicine, Alternative Energy, Food
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Examples of Synthetic Materials Clothes Medicines Foods Alternative Fuels
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Conservation Process of managing earths resources more effectively Helps maintain the health of the natural world Helps maintain biodiversity Follow the 4 R’s
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4 R’s Reduce – Buy and use less – Buy in bulk Less packaging – Eliminate junk mail Recycle – Almost everything can be recycled Reuse – Using materials again instead of throwing them away – Ex. Plastic water bottles, Tupperware Rebuy – Buy from thrift stores – Buy recycled items
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Carbon Footprint Measures how much carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) you produce in your daily life – CO 2 contributes to global warming Behaviors that contribute to your carbon footprint – Transportation – Electricity – Water – Heat – Mail – Food
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