CP Environmental Science Final Exam 2010

Air pollution and the atmosphere: 2.1, 2.4, 2.5, 2.6, 2.9, 2.13, 2.14, 2.15

Specific criteria pollutants: sources, ways to reduce

Acid precipitation

Layers of atmosphere

Indoor air pollutants including radon

Global Climate Change and ozone depletion: 2.3, 2.1

Municipal waste and toxics: 6.6, and power point/notes

Energy: 6.1 to 6.5 (know pros and cons of different energy types)

fossil fuels

nuclear

renewable energies including solar, different types of biomass, hydropower, geothermal, wind,

Biodiversity and endangered species: 1.13, 1.14

Introduced species

Reasons for endangerment

Air Pollution, Global Climate Change, and Stratospheric Ozone Depletion

  • Know all criteria pollutants, their sources, effects, and reduction methods
  • catalytic converter
  • wet scrubber
  • temperature inversion
  • smog
  • Secondary pollutants vs. primary pollutants
  • radon – sources, effects, remediation
  • ozone depletion, CFCs, stratosphere, UV radiation
  • global climate change

Gasses: CO2 , methane

the Greenhouse effect – describe this

Forests – role in absorbing CO2

How to deal with

Evidence of climate change

Effects of climate change

Temperature changes: past and predicted

Kyoto Protocol

  • acid deposition (precipitation, rain)
  • pH scale (acid rain below 5.6)
  • streams natural buffering
  • leaching (aluminum and other metals due to acid precipitation)

hard vs. soft water

  • Clean Air act, NAAQS, and criteria pollutants
  • emissions vs. ambient air
  • synergistic effect (synergism)
  • Agencies: DEP, EPA
  • externalities of pollution
  • layers of atmosphere

Biodiversity

  • Types of biodiversity: species, genetic, ecological
  • Reasons maintaining biodiversity is important: ecological and human implications
  • Key causes: habitat loss, introduction exotic (introduced) species, pollution, direct killing
  • Specific species and why they are endangered
  • Extinct species: key examples and why they became extinct
  • Introduced species: key specific examples, how introduced, problems associated with them
  • Laws: Endangered Species Act, CITES, Marine Mammal Protection Act
  • carrying capacity
  • “Helping” endangered species:

breed and release

capture and release

habitat protection: preserves, national parks, state protected areas

laws/regulations to reduce/stop direct killing and/or capturing

ecotourism

  • PA’s non-endangered species and wildlife management (just the basics on this)

Waste and Toxics

  • municipal, industrial
  • Disposal: advantages and disadvantages of each disposal method

landfills, incineration, deep well injection

  • Trends in waste production: amounts and types of waste produced
  • per capita changes in waste production
  • recycling vs. reusing: materials that can be recycled and/or reused; advantages; disadvantages
  • biodegradable
  • bioaccumulation/biomagnifications
  • persistance
  • hazardous: flammable, toxic, corrosive, pathogenic
  • NI MBY
  • Superfund (CERCLA) and RCRA: purposes of laws,
  • renewable vs. non-renewable, and products made from each
  • toxicity: how determined, LD50, factors/variables that affect toxicity of different substances
  • “the dose makes the poison”
  • Palmerton: smelting, the “story” of Palmerton Superfund Site

Energy

  • renewable vs. non-renewable
  • Uses and trends in U.S.; how much; for what purposes;
  • energy efficiency and “wasted” heat energy
  • fossil fuels: types, advantages, uses of each type, amounts for future
  • hydrocarbon and stored energy in chemical bonds
  • Solar: photovoltaic, flat-plate solar water heater (solar collector), passive and home design
  • hydrogen: as a fuel and as use in fuel cell
  • nuclear: design of plants, fuel, disposal of waste, TMI, Chernobyl, types of radiation, half-life of radioactive isotopes
  • biofuels: know how produced, uses, advantages and disadvantages

methane

methanol

wood

anaerobic (which does this produce?)

  • electric cars
  • hybrid cars
  • fuel cells
  • hydroelectric: pros and cons