Environmental Health
Food
Climate
Air
Water
100

An organism that causes disease.

What is a pathogen?

100

Large-scale food shortages leading to starvation and death.

What is famine?

100

Daily or hourly changes in temperature or precipitation.

What is weather?

100
99% of people are exposed to this quality of air annually.

What is poor/bad/harmful?

100

The hydrologic cycle hinges on these two processes.

What are evaporation and precipitation?

200

One of the top three causes of death globally, alongside diabetes and cancer.

What is heart/cardiovascular disease?

200

Organisms with entirely new genes, and even new organisms, often called “transgenic” organisms, are used extensively in commercial agriculture.

What are GMOs/genetically modified organisms?

200

Long-term weather patterns.

What is climate?

200

Legislation that established air quality standards in the US.

What is the Clean Air Act?

200

This layer of underground rock, sediment, and or soil stores and transmits groundwater.

What is an aquifer?
300

A term for an infectious disease transmitted between animals and humans.

What is zoonosis/zoonotic disease?

300

Global food waste accounts for this percent of all food production.

What is 30%?

300

The amount of light a surface reflects.

What is albedo? 

300

Most conventional/criteria air pollutants come from this process. 

What is burning fossil fuels?

300

Water compartment that contains 87.2% of the earth’s fresh water.

What is ice and snow?

400

Agents that damage or alter genetic material (DNA) in cells.

What are mutagens?

400

Term meaning to have access to sufficient food for daily life.

What is food security?

400

Layer of the atmosphere containing the most ozone.

What is the stratosphere?

400

Highly reactive greenhouse gas that can trap substantially more heat than CO2.

What is ozone?

400

A term used to describe water exported in other forms, such as crops and meat.

What are virtual water exports?

500

Term used to describe both a single exposure to and a sudden, severe, but often reversible response to an environmental toxin.


What is acute?

500

This phenomenon describes the positive feedback between increased pesticide use and increased resistance of pests.

What is the pesticide treadmill?

500

An international agreement to voluntarily reduce greenhouse gas emissions adopted in 1997.

What is the Kyoto Protocol?

500

The most significant source of indoor air pollution in developing countries.

What is smoke?

500

The goal of this Act was to return all U. S. surface waters to “fishable and swimmable” conditions.

What is the Clean Water Act?

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