environmental science

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Environmental Science

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Environmental Science. What is Environmental Science?. Relationships between people and the natural environment. Interdisciplinary Broad field Ecology is a basic tool ( Oikos – Logos) Goals Establish general principles about how the natural world functions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Environmental Science

What is Environmental Science?

Relationships between people and the natural environment.

InterdisciplinaryBroad fieldEcology is a basic tool (Oikos – Logos)

GoalsEstablish general principles about how the natural

world functionsIdentifying, understanding, and solving problems

What is Earth Science?

• All the sciences that collectively seek to understand Earth and its neighbors in space.

• Four Sciences:

• Geology• Oceanography• Meteorology• Astronomy

How are earth science, environmental science and people connected?

Earth Science

Environmental science

People

Environment:

-Biologic

al

-Physica

l

Resources:-Renewable-Non-renewable

Population growth

Environmental problems

How do Earth scientists know all this stuff?

• Observation• Experimentation• Understanding other sciences – Biology – Physics– Chemistry

The Nature of Scientific Inquiry

The Scientific Method

1) Collection of scientific facts through observation and measurement

2) Hypothesis: tentative explanations to observations

3) Extensive testing and analysis4) Acceptance, modification or

rejection

Models

Useful when dealing with natural processes that occur over very long periods of time (scales of time) or in inaccessible locations.

The nature of Scientific Inquiry

Theory• A well tested and widely

accepted view that the scientific community agrees best explains certain observable facts

Paradigms• Theories that are

extensively documented and explain a large number of interrelated aspects of the natural world.

Scientific laws• A basic principle that describes a particular behavior of

nature that is generally narrow in scope and can be stated briefly

STUDYING EARTH FROM SPACE… pg 8.

How can satellite images be used to study Earth from space?

• Know the composition of Earth’s surface• Precipitation data• Understanding global climate change

Scales of Space and Time

The Nebular Hypothesis and Origins of Earth and the Solar System

A. solar nebula

B. contraction into rotating disk

C. Cooling causing condensing into tiny (dust sized) solid particles

D. Collisions between these form larger bodies

E. These accrete to form planets

Oceanography 100 Animations

Earth’s Spheres

Atmosphere

Geosphere

Biosphere

Hydrosphere

HYDROSPHERE

• Oceans 97%• Freshwater– Streams– Lakes– Glaciers– Underground

Atmosphere

• Life-giving gaseous envelope• ½ lies below an altitude of

5.6 km• 90 % occurs within just 16

km• Protects from the

dangerous radiation emitted by the Sun.

• Site of weather and climate

Biosphere

• All life on Earth• Depend and respond to their physical environment• Have an effect on their physical environment

GeosphereLayers defined by

composition:

• Crust– Oceanic, 40 km, d= 3g/cm3– Continental, 70 km, d = 2,7 g/cm3

• Mantle, 2900 km, d=3,4 g/cm3

• Core, d= 13 g/cm3

Geosphere

Layers defined by physical properties:

• Lithosphere

• Asthenosphere

• Lower mantle

• Outer core

• Inner core

Continental Drift and Plate Tectonics

Mountainbelts

OCEAN BASIN

CONTINENTS

Earth as a System

What is a SYSTEM?• Group of interacting parts that form a complex

whole.

• Two types:– Closed system: energy moves freely in and out,

but matter does not enter or leave the system.– Open system: both matter and energy flow into

and out of the system.

Earth as a System

• Within the Earth system, the spheres are interconnected.

Earth as a System

• Energy for the Earth system is powered by two sources:1) Sun: drives external processes that

occur in the atmosphere, hydrosphere and at Earth’s surface.

2) Heat from Earth’s interior: powers internal processes that produce volcanoes, earthquakes and mountains.

Earth as a System

• Most Earth systems have positive or negative feedback mechanisms.

– Positive feedback: enhance or drive change

– Negative feedback: work to maintain the system as it is

Sources

• http://www.enov.co.uk/pages/Environment.html• http://www.myrrh-art.com/Levels_in%20Matter_T.html• http://volcano.oregonstate.edu/volcanoes-national-park

s• http://www.northeducation.ac.th/elearning/ed_sc30/ch

ap07/sc7112_1.html• http://animals.howstuffworks.com/marine-life/coral-reef

.htm• http://www.kidsgeo.com/geography-for-kids/0040-intro

duction-to-our-atmosphere.php• http://sciencerevolution.net/dict_m.html• http://www.crystalinks.com/platetectonics.html• http://bumileluhur.blogspot.com/2011/01/seafloor-feat

ures.html• http://www.eoearth.org/article/Physiography_of_the_E

arth's_terrestrial_surface