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1.1: Environmental Geology Defined

  • Page ID
    33073
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    Environmental geology is about the interface between geological processes and the environment, and we choose to use a broad definition of “the environment”. This includes Earth's biosphere (all living things), the hydrosphere (all water including frozen water), the atmosphere (the layer of gas that surrounds Earth), and the geosphere/lithosphere (all loose sediment and rock). It also includes human activities that affect the geosphere/lithosphere, such as mining, energy resource extraction, and waste disposal: into the ground, into water and into the air. Summarized, it involves how we can practically apply the principles of geology in the solving of environmental problems created by man.

    To understand environmental geology, you must first understand these earth systems. This course covers the following topics as it relates to these systems:

    1. Earth's Interior
    2. Plate Tectonics
    3. Minerals
    4. Rocks
    5. Soils
    6. Volcanoes
    7. Earthquakes
    8. Tsunamis
    9. Earth’s Atmosphere
    10. Carbon and Nitrogen Cycles
    11. Weather
    12. Climate
    13. Water Resources

    Then we add in the effects of humans and explore topics like:

    1. Mass Wasting
    2. Water Needs
    3. Flooding
    4. Drought
    5. Energy Needs
    6. Energy Resources
    7. Waste Disposal
    8. Water Pollution
    9. Air Pollution
    10. Climate Change
    11. Sea Level Change

    It isn’t difficult to see that Environmental Geology is more important now than it has ever been. This is partly because environmental issues in general are more important than ever due to the crisis of climate change and the rapidly expanding human population, but also because climate change is, to a large degree, a geological problem. We can understand its past by studying the geological record going back thousands, millions and billions of years and we can understand its present by applying geological methods to data collection and analysis. Other environmental concerns, many related to the topics listed above, are critical as well.

    Most important of all, we can affect the future of all environmental issues by changing the way we do things, and through the decisions we make as we set policy.


    This page titled 1.1: Environmental Geology Defined is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Steven Earle (BCCampus) .

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