Environmental geology / James S. Reichard, Georgia Southern University.
Material type:
TextPublisher: New York, NY : McGrawHill LLC, [2024]Edition: Fifth editionDescription: 1 volume (various paging) : color illustrations, maps ; 29 cmContent type: - text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781264648016
- 1264648014
- 9781266640346
- 1266640347
- 9781266132261
- QE 39.5 R45 2024
| Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book
|
TUP Manila Library | General Circulation Section-GF | QE 39.5 R45 2024 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | P00034247 |
Includes index.
Part 1 – Fundamentals of Environmental GeologyChapter 1 Humans and the Geologic EnvironmentChapter 2 Earth from a Larger PerspectiveChapter 3 Earth MaterialsChapter 4 Earth's Structure and Plate TectonicsPart 2 – Hazardous Earth ProcessesChapter 5 Earthquakes and Related HazardsChapter 6 Volcanoes and Related HazardsChapter 7 Mass Wasting and Related HazardsChapter 8 Streams and FloodingChapter 9 Coastal HazardsPart 3 – Earth ResourcesChapter 10 Soil ResourcesChapter 11 Water ResourcesChapter 12 Mineral and Rock ResourcesChapter 13 Conventional Fossil Fuel ResourcesChapter 14 Alternative Energy ResourcesPart 4 – The Health of Our EnvironmentChapter 15 Pollution and Waste Disposal Chapter 16 Global Climate ChangeAppendix A Units and Conversions
"Environmental Geology, 5e focuses on the fascinating interaction between humans and the geologic processes that shape Earth's environment. Because this text emphasizes how human survival is highly dependent on the natural environment, students should find the topics to be quite relevant to their own lives and, therefore, more interesting. One of the key themes of this textbook is that humans are an integral part of a complex and interactive system scientists call the Earth system. Throughout the text the author explains how the Earth system responds to human activity and how our actions affect the very environment in which we live. A key point is that our activity often produces unintended and undesirable consequences. A good example from the text is how engineers have built dams and artificial levees to control flooding on the Mississippi River. But this has caused unintended changes in the geologic environment. For thousands of years, the rate at which the river deposited sediment in the Mississippi Delta was approximately equal to the rate that the sediment compacted under its own weight. Because the two rates were similar, the land surface remained above sea level. However, by using dams and artificial levees to confine the Mississippi River to its channel, humans disrupted the delicate balance between sediment deposition and compaction"-- Provided by publisher.
Reichard, J. S. (2024). Environmental geology (5th ed.). McGraw-Hill.
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