Top Banner
Earth’s Resources Chapter 4
24

Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Apr 01, 2015

Download

Documents

Raul Carradine
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Earth’s Resources

Chapter 4

Page 2: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Energy and Mineral Resources

• Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades)– Plants, animals, natural

fibers trees, water, wind, sun

• Nonrenewable – takes millions of years to form and accumulate– Coal, oil, natural gas,

iron, copper, uranium, gold

Page 3: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Fossil Fuels

• Any hydrocarbon that may be used as a source of energy

– Coal, oil, natural gas1. Coal – forms when heat and pressure transform

plant material over millions of years. a. Stages:

i. Peatii. Ligniteiii. Bituminous coaliv. anthracite

Page 4: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Coal Continued

b. Uses:a. Power plantsb. Enormous

reserves

c. Disadvantagesa. Surface mining -

scars landb. Underground

mining - dangerous

c. Burning – produces sulfuric acid

Page 5: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Coal in the United States

Page 6: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Petroleum and Natural Gas

• Form from remains of plants and animals that were buried in ancient seas

• Steps:1. Large # of plants & animals buried in ocean-floor

sediments2. Continual sediment build-up causes organic

remains to transform into petroleum and natural gas

3. Oil and gas move into nearby rock beds4. Less dense than water – so migrate upwards

through water-filled spaces

Page 7: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Petroleum and Natural Gas

5. Oil trap – structure that allows large amounts of fluid to accumulate– Anticline –

uparched series of sedimentary rock layers

Page 8: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Tar Sands

• Tar sands – mixtures of clay and sand combined with water and black tar– Can be refined into oil– Disadvantages:

• Causes huge land disturbance

• Requires large amounts of water

• Contaminated water and sediment accumulate in toxic disposal ponds

Page 9: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Oil Shale• Oil Shale – rock that

contains waxy mixture of hydrocarbons called kerogen

• Processes:1. Can be mined and heated

to vaporize kerogen2. Vapor processed to remove

impurities

– Disadvantages:– Heat energy 1/8 that of

crude oil– More expensive to mine,

process, and dispose of

Page 10: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Formation of Mineral Deposits

• Ore – useful metallic mineral that can be mined at a profit– Natural

concentration of many minerals is small

Page 11: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Mineral Resources and Igneous Processes

• Igneous Processes produce deposits of:– Gold– Silver– Copper– Mercury– Lead– Platinum– Nickel

Page 12: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Hydrothermal Solutions

• Most form from hot, metal-rich fluids left during late stages of movement and cooling of magma

• Examples:– Gold deposits in

Homestake Mine, South Dakota

– Lead, zinc, silver ores in Idaho

Page 13: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Placer Deposits

• Formed when eroded heavy minerals settle quickly from moving water while less dense particles remain suspended and continue to move– Common sites: inside

bends of streams, cracks, depressions

– Sparked California gold rush

Page 14: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Nonmetallic Mineral Resources

• All are used for specific chemical elements or compounds

• Divided into two broad groups:– Building materials

• Crushed stone, sand, and gravel)

– Industrial minerals• Limestone• Not nearly as abundant• Require considerable processing before use

Page 15: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Alternate Energy Sources

• Solar Energy• Nuclear Energy• Wind Energy• Hydroelectric Energy• Geothermal Energy• Tidal Power

Page 16: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Solar Energy

• Direct use of the sun’s rays to supply heat or electricity– Two advantages

• “fuel” is free• Non-polluting

– Draw-backs• Equipment and

installation is not free• Supplemental energy is

needed on cloudy days, in winter, and at night

– Example: Solar collector• Passive or active

Page 17: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Nuclear Energy

• Fuel for nuclear plants comes from radioactive materials that release energy through nuclear fission:

1. Heavy atoms bombarded with neutrons;2. split into smaller nuclei and emit neutrons and heat

energy3. Produces a chain reaction

– Energy drives steam turbines that turn electrical generator

Page 18: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Nuclear Energy• Obstacles:

1. Cost of building safe facilities2. Hazards associated with disposal of nuclear wastes3. Possibility of a serious accident could allow radioactive

materials to ascape– Three Mile Island; 1979

– Substantial damage to reactor; little harm to public

– Chernobyl; 1986 – Reactor out of control; 10 days to put out fire– High levels of radioactive material as far as Norway

Page 19: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Wind Energy• Estimate – all winds of N.

and S. Dakota could provide 80% electrical energy in U.S.

• Wind turbines used to collect wind energy– Experiments by U.S.

Department of Energy since 1980

– Altamont Pass near San Fransisco

• Next 50-60 years: 5-10% of country’s demand

• Needs:– technical advances– Noise pollution– Cost of land

Page 20: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Hydroelectric Power

• Drives turbines that produce electricity• Produce about 5% of the country’s electricity• Dams – allow for controlled flow of water

– Water held in a reservoir behind a dam is a form of stored energy that can be released through the dam to produce electric power

• Disadvantages:– Sediment is deposited behind dam and builds up –

eventually fills reservoir– Availability of suitable sites

Page 21: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,
Page 22: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Geothermal Energy

• Harnessed by tapping natural underground reservoirs of steam and hot water– Used directly for heating

and to turn turbines to generate electric power

– First one in U.S. built in 1960

– Disadvantages• Clean, but not

inexhaustible• Cannot be recharged

Page 23: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Tidal Power

• Harnessed by constructing a dam across mouth of a bay or estuary in coastal areas with a large tidal range

• Strong in-and-out flow that results drives turbines and electric generators

• Is not economical if tidal range is too big or too small

Page 24: Earth’s Resources Chapter 4. Energy and Mineral Resources Renewable – replenished over fairly short time spans (months, years, decades) –Plants, animals,

Renewable Energy

• Some of the renewable energies we will look at:– Biomass– Wind– Hydroelectric– Solar– Geothermal

• Which is the most advantageous???...