Foundations
Humans & the Environment
Misc
Worldviews
Sustainability
100

What is environmental science the study of?

The interaction of humans with the environment

100

List 2 resources early humans relied on from the environment

Food, water, shelter, tools

100

What kind of system is Earth, what does that mean?

Closed system, matter doesn't enter or leave in large amounts

100

What is environmental ethics?

The moral relationship between humans and the environment

100

What does sustainability mean?

Meeting present needs without compromising the ability to meet those needs in the future, being able to meet your needs indefinitely

200

Name 2 fields of study that contribute to environmental science.

Biology, geology, hydrology, chemistry, engineering, social science, earth science

200

What practice helped hunter-gatherers hunt sustainably?


Using every part of the animal, setting quotas

200

What is the Tragedy of the Commons?

Resources owned by nobody will be depleted faster

200

Give one modern day example of anthropocentrism

Prioritizing money over conservation, Deforestation for profit, etc.

200

Which type of resource can be replaced naturally, but may take a little time?

Renewable Resources

300

What does it mean that environmental science is interdisciplinary?

That it covers multiple fields of study

300

What was one major consequence of the Agricultural Revolution?

Soil erosion, flooding, water shortages

300

What is is it called when you weigh the pros and cons of a decision to decide if it's worth it?

Cost-Benefit Analysis

300

What does an ecocentrist value? How is this different from anthropocentrism?

Ecocentrist - Cares for the environment regardless of how it can benefit humans.

Anthropocentrist - Uses the environment to maximize benefits for humans

300

What is the impact one person has on the environment?

Ecological Footprint

400

Which branch of science studies plants?

Botany

400

What major change happened during the Industrial Revolution?

Mechanization, mass production, fossil fuels

400

Give one example of each of each of these resources: Inexhaustible, Renewable, Nonrenewable, Recyclable

Inexhaustible - Sunlight

Renewable - Timber

Nonrenewable - Coal, oil, natural gas

Recyclable - Copper, aluminum

400

What's the difference between the planetary management worldview & the stewardship worldview?

Planetary Management - Humans regulate the environment for maximum benefit

Stewardship - Humans regulate the environment to ethically and in a sustainable way

400

Why is soil erosion a sustainability issue?

You won't be able to farm crops long term

500

Why is environmental science important for decision making in society?

It helps understand human impacts and provides a guide for sustainable choices

500

What is one benefit & one drawback of the Industrial Revolution

Benefit: higher standard of living, more people could be supported

Drawback: pollution, loss of biodiversity, climate change

500

Explain Supply & Demand

The cost of a product may change depending on how many people want it. When demand is high, supply is low, and costs are high. When demand is low, supply is high, and costs are low.

500

How would someone with the environmental worldview handle global challenges like climate change or biodiversity?

Environmental Wisdom - Humans are fully dependent on nature, so it should be taken care of


Laws would prioritize protecting ecosystems above human gain

500

When is a society considered sustainable?

When resources replenish faster than they disappear