Mining Basics
Mining Impacts
Forestry
Urbanization
Human Impact
100

Describe overburden

Overburden is the soil and rock layer above a mineral deposit.

100

Explain the chemical process behind acid mine drainage

When sulfide minerals (like pyrite) are exposed to oxygen and water, they form sulfuric acid, which lowers pH and leaches toxic metals into water.

100

Define clear-cutting

Clear-cutting is removing all trees in an area

100

Explain why urban areas experience higher temperatures than rural areas

Urban materials (asphalt, concrete) absorb and retain heat, lack vegetation reduces cooling, and waste heat from energy use increases temperatures.

100

Define ecological footprint and identify what it measures.

It measures the amount of land and water needed to support a person’s resource use and waste absorption.

200

Compare surface mining and subsurface mining in terms of cost and environmental impact

Surface mining is cheaper and more efficient but causes greater environmental damage

Subsurface mining is more expensive and dangerous but less disruptive to surface ecosystems.

200

Identify the primary environmental and human health risks associated with gold mining

Mercury and cyanide contamination, which poison water supplies and bioaccumulate in organisms.

200

Explain how selective cutting can maintain forest ecosystem stability compared to clear-cutting

It removes only specific trees, preserving biodiversity, soil structure, and nutrient cycling.

200

Distinguish between urbanization and urban sprawl, including environmental consequences

Urbanization is population growth in cities

Urban sprawl is uncontrolled expansion, leading to habitat loss, increased car use, and pollution.

200

Identify one major activity that increases carbon footprint and explain why

Burning fossil fuels (e.g., driving) releases CO₂, increasing greenhouse gas concentrations.

300

Explain how strip mining alters landscapes and affects long-term land usability

It removes large land strips, leaving spoil piles and degraded soil, making land difficult to restore for agriculture or ecosystems.

300

Define tailings and explain their environmental risks

Tailings are leftover waste after ore extraction. They can contain toxic metals and contaminate soil and water.

300

Explain how clear-cutting impacts soil fertility and water retention

Removes roots that hold soil, increases erosion, reduces organic matter, and decreases water infiltration.

300

Describe four causes of urban flooding

Impervious surfaces, poor drainage systems, removal of vegetation, and increased stormwater runoff.

300

Describe the Tragedy of the Commons in groundwater use

Individuals overuse shared aquifers for personal benefit, leading to depletion and long-term scarcity.

400

Evaluate one advantage and one disadvantage of mountaintop removal mining.

Advantage: efficient coal extraction

Disadvantage: ecosystem destruction and water contamination.

400

Justify why mining in Arctic/Antarctic regions is environmentally harmful

Fragile ecosystems recover slowly, biodiversity is low but specialized, and disturbances can cause long-term irreversible damage.

400

Explain how deforestation contributes to climate change through the carbon cycle

Trees store carbon, removing them releases CO₂ and reduces carbon sequestration, increasing atmospheric carbon.

400

Explain how urban runoff degrades aquatic ecosystems

Carries pollutants (oil, heavy metals, nutrients) into waterways, causing eutrophication and harming organisms.

400

Propose one realistic strategy to reduce ecological footprint and explain its impact

Using public transportation reduces fossil fuel use and lowers carbon emissions.

500

Explain the full process and environmental consequences of mountaintop removal mining, including downstream effects

Blasting removes mountaintops to access coal. Debris fills valleys, burying streams, increasing flooding, and contaminating water systems.

500

Compare the economic benefits of mining with its ecological costs, providing one example of each.

Economic: job creation and resource supply 

Ecological: habitat destruction and pollution (e.g., acid drainage).

500

Evaluate how deforestation affects biodiversity and gene flow in fragmented habitats

Habitat fragmentation isolates populations, reduces gene flow, increases inbreeding, and lowers biodiversity.

500

Propose two engineering or planning solutions to reduce urban runoff and explain how they work

Permeable pavement allows water infiltration

Green roofs absorb rainwater, reducing runoff volume

500

Explain how stabilizing human population growth can reduce global carbon emissions

Fewer people reduce total resource consumption and energy demand, lowering overall greenhouse gas emissions.

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