1 / 43

ESC110 Chapter Eleven Environmental Geology & Earth Resources

ESC110 Chapter Eleven Environmental Geology & Earth Resources. Chapter Eleven Readings & Objectives. Required Readings Cunningham & Cunningham, Chapter Eleven Environmental Geology and Earth Resources. After finishing this chapter, you should be able to:

garnet
Télécharger la présentation

ESC110 Chapter Eleven Environmental Geology & Earth Resources

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ESC110 Chapter ElevenEnvironmental Geology & Earth Resources

  2. Chapter Eleven Readings & Objectives Required ReadingsCunningham & Cunningham, Chapter Eleven Environmental Geology and Earth Resources After finishing this chapter, you should be able to: • understand some basic geologic principles, including how plate-tectonic movements affect conditions for life on the earth; • explain how the 3 major rock types form and how the rock cycle works; • summarize economic mineralogy and strategic minerals; • discuss the environmental effects of mining and mineral processing; and, • recognize the geologic hazards of earthquakes, volcanoes, floods and erosion.

  3. Chapter Eleven Key Terms • Barrier islands - page 269 of text • core 256 • crust 256 • earthquakes 265 • flood 267 • floodplains 267 • heap-leach extraction 264 • igneous rocks 258 • landslides 268 • magma 256 • mantle 256 • metamorphic rocks 258 • Midocean ridges 256 • mineral 257 • rock 257 • rock cycle 258 • sedimentary rocks 258 • sedimentation 259 • smelting 263 • strategic metals and minerals 261 • Tectonic plates 256 • volcanoes 266 • weathering 259

  4. Chapter Eleven Topics • Case Study: Radioactive Waste Disposal • A Dynamic Planet • Minerals and Rocks • Economic Geology and Mineralogy • Environmental Effects of Resource Extraction • Conserving Geologic Resources • Geologic Hazards

  5. Yucca Mountain is an example of why dynamic earth processes are included in waste storage. • Yucca Mountain is the first selection by the U.S. for long-term storage of high level radioactive waste. Some of this material will stay radioactive for >500,000 years.

  6. PART 1: A DYNAMIC PLANET • Earth Is a Layered Sphere • Its core has an interior composed of dense, intensely hot metal that generates a magnetic field enveloping the earth. • Its mantle is a hot, pliable layer surrounding and less dense than the core. • Its crust is a cool, lightweight, brittle outermost layer that floats on top of the mantle.

  7. Tectonic Processes and Shifting Continents The upper layer of the earth's mantle contains magmatic convection currents that break the overlaying crust into a mosaic of tectonic plates. • These plates slide slowly across earth's surface. • Ocean basins form where continents crack and pull apart. • Magma forced up through cracks in oceanic crust form mid-oceanic ridges. • Earthquakes are caused by grinding and jerking as plates slide past each other. • Mountain ranges are pushed up at the margins of colliding plates. • When an oceanic plate collides with a continental landmass, the continental plate will ride up over the seafloor and the oceanic plate will subduct down into the mantle. • Deep ocean trenches mark subduction zones.

  8. Pangea: The Super-continent • Geologists suggest that several times in earth's history most, or all, of the continents gathered to form a single super-continent, Pangea, surrounded by a single global ocean.

  9. Tectonic Plates

  10. Tectonic Processes & the Rock Cycle

  11. Communities in deep-sea ocean trenches

  12. PART 2: MINERALS & ROCKS Mineral versus rock Rock types & how they are formed Weathering & sedimentation Rock cycle • A mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic, solid element or compound having a definite chemical composition and a specific internal crystal structure • A rockis a solid, cohesive, aggregate of one or more minerals. Each rock has a characteristic mixture of minerals, grain sizes, and ways in which these grains are mixed together into a solid mass.

  13. Three Types of Rocks Igneous Sedimentary Metamorphic • Igneous is the most common rock type in earth's crust. • It is solidified from magma extruded onto the surface from volcanic vents. • Quick cooling of magma produces fine-grained rocks. • Basalt • Slow cooling of magma produces coarse-grained rocks. • Granite

  14. Rock Types (continued) • Sedimentary rock is derived from deposited materials that remain in place long enough, or are covered with enough material for compaction, such that the materials may again become rock. • Often formed from crystals that precipitate out of, or grow from, a solution. • Shale • Sandstone • Tuff • Limestone • Metamorphic rock form when pre-existing rocks are modified by heat, pressure, and chemical agents. • Chemical reactions can alter both the composition and structure of rocks as they are metamorphosed. • Marble (from limestone) • Quartzite (from sandstone) • Slate (from mudstone and shale)

  15. Weathering and Sedimentation • Mechanical - Physical break-up of rocks into smaller particles without a change in chemical composition. • Chemical - Selective removal or alteration of specific components that leads to weakening and disintegration of rock. • Oxidation is combination with oxygen or removal of electrons from atom, ion or molecule during rx. • Hydrolysis is splitting of water. Hydrogen of water combines with anion of mineral and hydroxyl of water combines with cation of mineral to form acid and base. • Sedimentation - Deposition of loosened material

  16. Below is wind-blown sandstone Above is water-sculpted sandstone

  17. Rock Types & the Rock Cycle The rock cycle involves creation, destruction, and metamorphosis. Mechanisms include crushing, folding, melting and recrystallization by dynamic processes related to those same ones that shape the earth's crust.

  18. PART 3: ECONOMIC GEOLOGY & MINERALOGY • Economic mineralogy is the study of minerals that are valuable for manufacturing and trade. • Public policy in the U.S. has encouraged mining on public lands as a way of boosting the economy and utilizing natural resources.

  19. Most economic minerals are metal ores (ores are minerals with high concentrations of metals). • Metals are elements that easily give up an electron and thus have a positive charge (cations). • Metals consumed in the greatest quantity by world industry (metric tons annually) are: • Iron (740 million) • Aluminum (40 million) • Manganese (22.4 million) • Copper (8 million) • Chromium (8 million) • Nickel (0.7 million)

  20. Nonmetal Mineral Resources • Sand and gravel production for road and building construction make up the greatest volume and dollar value of all nonmetal mineral resources. This includes brick and concrete construction, paving, sandblasting and glass production. • Evaporites include halite (rock salt), gypsum, potash • Sulfur deposits are mined mainly for sulfuric acid production (industry, car batteries, some medicinal products). • Limestone is used to make concrete and building stone. Pulverized, it is used to neutralize acidic soil. • Soils

  21. Strategic metals and minerals are ones that a country uses but cannot produce itself • Wealthy industrial nations often stockpile strategic resources, especially metals. • Of the 80 industrial metals and minerals, between one-third and one-half are considered strategic resources. U.S.

  22. Global Metal Trade

  23. PART 4: ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS OF RESOURCE EXTRACTION • Geologic resource extraction involves the physical processes of mining and the physical or chemical processes of separating minerals, metals, and other geologic resources from ores or other materials. • Ore - a rock in which a valuable or useful metal occurs at a concentration high enough to make mining it economically attractive

  24. Mining • Underground, tunnel mining is very dangerous due to: • Gas • Inhaling Particulate Matter • Tunnel Collapse • Placer mining • Strip-mining or open-pit mining • Tailings - surface waste deposits • Groundwater contamination • Spoil banks - acid and sediment runoff

  25. Implications of Resource Extraction • Mining • Placer Mining - Hydraulically washing out metals deposited in streambed gravel. • Destroys streambeds and fills water with suspended solids. • Strip, Open Pit or Mountain Removal Mining • Large scars on land surface. • Tailings • Toxic runoff • Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act (SMCLRA) (1977) requires better restoration of strip-mined lands, especially if the mined land is classified as prime farmland. • Difficult and expensive. • Often more than $10,000.00 per hectare. • 50% of US coal is strip mined.

  26. Processing is the extraction of metal from ores by heating or with chemical solvents Damage due to air pollutants from smelting (roasting ore to release metals)

  27. Heap-leach extraction is when large piles of crushed ore are sprayed with a alkaline cyanide solution that percolates through the pile to dissolve gold. The effluent is left behind in ponds.

  28. PART 5: CONSERVING GEOLOGIC RESOURCES

  29. Types of Geologic Resource Conservation • Recycling is common for aluminum, platinum, gold, silver, copper, lead • Steel and iron recycling is easily done at minimills (photo to left). Cars also contain platinum as a catalytic converter catalyst. • Substituting new materials (polymers, high-tech alloys, glass cables, etc.)

  30. Recycling of Aluminum - A Big Success Story • Aluminum must be extracted from bauxite by electrolysis. This requires lots of energy! • Recycling waste aluminum consumes one-twentieth the energy of extraction from raw ore. • Nearly two-thirds of all aluminum beverage cans in US are recycled. • It makes environmental and economic sense to recycle aluminum. Everyone agrees!

  31. PART 6: GEOLOGIC HAZARDS • Earthquakes • Volcanoes • Floods • Landslides • Erosion

  32. Earthquakes • Creep is gradual movement. • When friction prevents creep, stress builds up until it is eventually released with a sudden jerk. • These jerks (earthquakes) frequently occur along subduction zones. • Earthquakes are sudden movements in the earth's crust that occur along faults where one rock mass slides past another. • Soil liquefaction is when shaking causes soil to lose structure • Tsunamis are seismic sea swells that accompany oceanic and coastal landslides and earthquakes.

  33. Volcanoes • Volcanoesand undersea magma vents are the sources of most of the earth's crust. • Many of world's fertile soils are weathered volcanic material. • Human/Environmental dangers include: • nuees ardentes ("glowing clouds") • Mudslides • ash and dust • sulfur emissions

  34. Flood - excess water that overflows stream banks and covers adjacent land. Biggest economic loss is usually contamination (carpet, drywall, drapes, electronics, etc. must be discarded if touched by flood water), not buildings or property carried away. Many human activities increase both the severity and frequency of floods (e.g., channelization, soil compaction, pavement and rooftops) put more storm runoff into streams quicker. Floodplains are flat, fertile farmland that help mitigate flooding. Flood control structures (locks, dams, levees, etc.) separate floodplains from rivers and transfer the problems downstream. Government care of flood victims encourages building and resetlement on floodplains.

  35. Erosion is the wearing away of land surfaces by water, wind, ice, gravitational creep or other geological agents. • Landslides (mass wasting or movement) occur when masses of material move downslope (slow or fast). • Gully formation is the development of deep trenches on flat ground. • Agricultural soil erosion is "an invisible crisis!"

  36. Erosion • Landslide is a general term for rapid down-slope movement of soil or rock. • Many human activities such as forest clearing and building homes on steep, unstable slopes increase both frequency and damage done by landslides. • Barrier Islands and beach erosion • These islands are located between the mainland and open sea. • Contain many of world's sandy beaches. • Many people place a high value on the ocean view and beach access. These are highly prized areas in which to build structures. • Development is undertaken with the understanding that modern technology will provide protection.

  37. Grains starve beaches and increase erosion downstream.

  38. Problems with development on the Barrier Islands sums up environmental issues associated with high real estate properties in treacherous locations of the U.S. • People place high value on views and recreational access. • Construction directly on geological hazardous areas can: 1) cause irreparable damage to entire ecosystems; and, 2) worsen storm damage. • Government policies often encourage people to build in risky places.

  39. Beach Erosion

More Related