Http://Prine/_/Para dise Ecological Implications of Energy.
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Transcript of Http://Prine/_/Para dise Ecological Implications of Energy.
http://www.last.fm/music/John+Prine/_/Paradise
Ecological Implications of Energy
Where does the energy your use come from
http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/epa/figes1.html
Where does the University of Dayton get its energy?
So most of the electricity nationally, and virtually all of that for UD comes from coal?
Where does that coal come from??
http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/coal/page/special/fig1.html
Where does that coal come from??
Where does that coal come from??
http://www.arc.gov/index.do?nodeId=608
http://www.arc.gov/index.do?nodeId=608
What are the most common methods of mining?
University of Kentucky
What are the most common methods of mining?
Are there ecological implications of this kind of mining?
http://maps.google.com/maps
What happens to mine land?
And golf!!
Groundwater Contamination
Acid Mine DrainageAcidity in AMD is comprised of mineral acidity (iron, aluminum, manganese, and other metals depending on the specific geologic setting and metal sulfide) and hydrogen ion acidity. Approximately 20,000 km of streams and rivers in the United States are degraded by AMD. About 90% of the AMD reaching streams originates in abandoned surface and deep mines. Since no company or individual claims responsibility for reclaiming abandoned mine lands (AML), no treatment of the AMD occurs and continual contamination of surface and groundwater resources results.
Transportation & associated CO2 release
http://www.last.fm/music/John+Prine/_/Paradise
Ecological Implications of Energy
Ecological Implications…
Top ten cotton producers — 2007(million 480-pound bales)
People's Republic of China 35.8 million bales
India 25.3 million bales
United States 19.2 million bales
Pakistan 9.0 million bales
Brazil 7.2 million bales
Uzbekistan 5.5 million bales
Turkey 3.2 million bales
Greece 1.4 million bales
Turkmenistan 1.3 million bales
Syria 1.2 million bales
Source:[18]
Conventionally grown cotton uses more insecticides than any other single crop and epitomizes the worst effects of chemically dependent agriculture. Each year cotton producers around the world use nearly $2.6 billion worth of pesticides -- more than 10% of the world's pesticides and nearly 25% of the world's insecticides.
Cotton growers typically use many of the most hazardous pesticides on the market including aldicarb, phorate, methamidophos and endosulfan. Cotton pesticides are often broad spectrum organophosphates--pesticides originally developed as toxic nerve agents during World War II--and carbamate pesticides.
http://www.panna.org/files/conventionalCotton.dv.html
Query: How are we to feed all y’all?
Reply: Industrialization!!
Why is nitrate, in particular, such a concern???
Where does this nitrate go?
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/07/080715114149.htm
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/story/2008/07/31/ST2008073100349.html
Sardine catch in the Pacific off the coast of North America
http://www.pbs.org/emptyoceans/index.html
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/wideangle/episodes/gutted/data-statistics-global-and-seafood/609/
http://www.montereybayaquarium.org/cr/seafoodwatch.aspx\
Some links related to seafood harvest
Ecological Implications of Food
I am an ecologist…
I study the sustainability of slash & burn agriculture in Indonesia.
What impact does this method have on biodiversity?
Is it sustainable over the long-term?
Dr. Deborah Lawrence
Ecological Implications of Food