Effect of Radio Active Pollution
- The diseases include blood in cough
- Ulcer
- Swelling of bone joints
- Cancer (Lung, Skin, Bone)
- Eye Problems
Visual Pollution
Factors : Color, Line, Texture, Direction
Causes of Visual Pollution
- Social change (Agriculture Industry)
- No prevention
- No conservation
- Communication
How to Avoid
- Promoting in conservation
- Environment Control
- Control Economic Growing
How Do Humans Contribute to the Greenhouse Effect?
While the greenhouse effect is an essential environmental prerequisite for life on Earth, there really can be too much of a good thing.
The problems begin when human activities distort and accelerate the natural process by creating more greenhouse gases in the atmosphere than are necessary to warm the planet to an ideal temperature.
• Burning natural gas, coal and oil -including gasoline for automobile engines-raises the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
• Some farming practices and land-use changes increase the levels of methane and nitrous oxide.
• Many factories produce long-lasting industrial gases that do not occur naturally, yet contribute significantly to the enhanced greenhouse effect and "global warming" that is currently under way.
• Deforestation also contributes to global warming. Trees use carbon dioxide and give off oxygen in its place, which helps to create the optimal balance of gases in the atmosphere. As more forests are logged for timber or cut down to make way for farming, however, there are fewer trees to perform this critical function.
• Population growth is another factor in global warming, because as more people use fossil fuels for heat, transportation and manufacturing the level of greenhouse gases continues to increase. As more farming occurs to feed millions of new people, more greenhouse gases enter the atmosphere.
Materials are transferred between the atmosphere, hydrosphere (oceans), lithosphere (land), and the biosphere. These various "spheres" act as "reservoirs" that keep materials for different amounts of time, called residence times. Each cycle forms a complicated system and the systems then interact with each other to produce weather and climate as well as the periodic fluctuations that maintain the dynamic balance on Earth, including all life. These cycles have evolved to the present rate over billions of years. Interruptions of these cycles at much larger rates by human endeavors such as fossil fuel burning produce several of the environmental problems we face.