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Environmental Science 101 Chapter 1 Environmental Science and Sustainability 1-11-16 This lecture will help you understand: • The meaning of the term environment • The importance of natural resources • That environmental science is interdisciplinary • The scientific method and how science operates • Some pressures facing the global environment • Sustainability and sustainable development Environment: the total of our surroundings • All the things around us with which we interact: • Living things • Animals, plants, forests, fungi, etc. • Non-living things • Continents, oceans, clouds, soil, rocks • Our built environment • Buildings, human-created living centers • Social relationships and institutions • Urbanization, Cars Humans exist within the environment • Humans exist within the environment and are part of nature. – Our survival depends on a healthy, functioning planet. • The fundamental insight of environmental science is that we are part of the natural world. – Our interactions with its other parts matter a great deal. Science • Definition: Human effort to understand how the natural world works by making observations, measurements and experiments. • Success depends on 5 Factors – – – – – Curiosity Skepticism Reproducibility Peer Review Critical Thinking The scientific method • A technique for testing ideas • A scientist makes an observation and asks questions of some phenomenon. • The scientist formulates a hypothesis, a statement that attempts to answer the question. • The hypothesis is used to generate predictions: specific statements that can be tested. • The results support or reject the hypothesis. 3 Limitations to Science • Can’t prove or disprove anything 100% • Biased • Natural Systems are very complex Sustainability • Definition: capacity of the earths natural systems and humans systems to survive, flourish, and adapt. Earths Natural Systems -Atmosphere -Hydrosphere/Cryosphere -Geosphere/Pedosphere -Biosphere -Anthrosphere 2 Reasons to Care • Self-Interest • Ethical Views Natural Capital • Definition: resources and ecological services provided by nature that keep us alive and support human economies – Resources: matter and energy • Life, Land, Air, Water, Soil, Minerals, Fossil Fuels – Ecological Services: natural cycles that allow us to survive • Top-soil, air, water purification, pollination • Renewable resources: – Perpetually available: sunlight, wind, wave energy – Renew themselves over short periods of time: timber, water, soil • Non-renewable resources: – Can be depleted (fixed/limited quantity) – Examples: Oil, coal, minerals Environmental Degradation • Definition: Use of a Natural Resource faster than it can be renewed or decreasing the effectiveness of a Natural Service – – – – – – Tropical Deforestation Drought Topsoil Erosion Water pollution Air pollution Extinctions Ecological Footprints • Definition: a rough measure of our environmental impact on earth’s renewable resources and life support system. – More-Developed vs Less-Developed Countries – Per Capita ($) Ecological Footprints II Are We Living Sustainably? What Can Be Done? Three Scientific Principles of Sustainability - Solar energy - Chemical cycling - Biodiversity Solar (?) Energy Definition: Renewable (nearly limitless) supply of energy – Powers Technological Solutions – Decreases Pollution • Power Plants • Transportation – Cars (Airplanes?) – Wind – Nuclear – Ch. 5/6 Chemical Cycling Definition: Continuous cycling of chemical required for life from the environments Soil (Ch. 4/9) , Water (Ch. 10/11) , and Air (Ch. 12) – Required for Life – Rate of Consumption vs Rate of Regeneration – Figure 1.18, 1.19, 1.20 Biodiversity Definition: Variety of genes, species, and ecosystems are required for the life-sustaining processes of energy flow and chemical cycling – Key Role in Cycling – Examples: Water Purification, Soil Regeneration, Fishing – Currently in the 6th great extinction? 3 Social Science Principles of Sustainability Economics: Full-Cost Pricing Price resources/pollution better *Wealth Equality Political Science: Win-Win Solutions Solve environmental issues without economic harms Benefit the largest number of people Ethics: Responsibility to Future Generations That’s you! (and your kids) Leave the Earth like we found it (or better!) *We only need 5-10% of the people to care to bring about change What Can We/You Do? Big/Hard Questions! – Environmental Century – Can’t predict everything – Reduce Ecological Footprint vs Expand Resources Available ? Environmental Science Environmentalism Environmental Science • The pursuit of knowledge • Remain objective Environmentalism • A social movement • Environmental activism Environmental Science How the natural world works and how humans interact with it Environment Impacts Humans Exam 1 Environmental Science and Sustainability (1) Population (2) Urbanization (3) Exam 3 Final Exam Environment Exam 2 Extinctions (8) Climate Change (13) Exam 4 Water (10) Food (4) Mineral Resources (7) Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (5) Nonrenewable Energy (6) Exam 5 Land Degradation (9) Water Pollution (11) Air Pollution (12) Waste (14)