Earth's Atmosphere: Culture Society
Earth's Atmosphere: Culture Society
Earth's Atmosphere: Culture Society
Environmental science is the systematic study of our environment and our proper place in it.
1. Ecology - the study of organisms and the environment interacting with one another.
Ecologists try to find relations between the status of the environment and the population of a
particular species within that environment, and if there are any correlations to be drawn
between the two.
2. Geoscience concerns the study of geology, soil science, volcanoes, and Earth's crust as
they relate to the environment. The scientists who take part in this field of study are the soil
scientists, physicists, biologists, and geomorphologists.
3. Atmospheric science is the study of the Earth’s atmosphere. It analyzes the relation of the
Earth’s atmosphere to the its other systems. This encompasses a wide variety of scientific
studies relating to space, astrology and the Earth’s atmosphere: meteorology, pollution, gas
emissions, and airborne contaminants.
4. Environmental chemistry is the study of the changes in the chemical make up of the
environment, such as contamination of the soil, pollution of the water, degradation of
chemicals, and the transport of chemicals upon the plants and animals of the immediate
environment.
Cited by Galang, et al. in their 2003 publication "Seven Lenses (or Environmental Principles as
if Adults Mattered)," these principles provide the right mindset and disposition to those who are
new to the discipline.
(1) No Poverty
UNIT 2
EARTH AS A SYSTEM
The Earth is an integrated system made up of many parts that interact with each other. Though these
parts are unique and very different from one another, they are, nonetheless, interconnected.
Lithosphere, also called geosphere, is composed of all the planet's rock, soil, and minerals. It also
includes not only the solid part, but also the molten rock in the Earth's interior.
Hydrosphere contains all of Earth's water in all of its phases - solid, liquid, and gaseous. Thus, it is
composed of Earth's saltwater, freshwater, glaciers, the permafrost, and the moisture in the
atmosphere. Water is essential to all living organisms.
Atmosphere - the layer of gases that surround Earth. One of the major functions of the atmosphere
is to absorb solar radiation that is harmful to living organisms and reflect it back to outer space. It also
contains several gases that are essential to life like carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen.
Biosphere harbors all the living things in the planet. This sphere is very much dependent on all the
other three systems. Organisms need the gases from the atmosphere, the water from the
hydrosphere, and the nutrients and minerals from the lithosphere.
Energy gives the force that can move, hold together, or rip matter apart.
Living things need both of these to exist. Matter makes up the basic unit of life, the cells, and all living
organisms are made up of cells. Energy is necessary for all cells to do work as well.
Energy is neither created nor destroyed. It is only converted from one form to another.
Kinetic Energy - energy of motion
Radiant energy – or light energy is electromagnetic energy that travels in transverse waves
species - refers to organisms of the same kind that are able to produce fertile offsprings.
Ecosystems, or ecological systems, consist of a biological community interacting with its physical
environment. It is composed of both the living (biotic) and non-living (abiotic) things in a particular
area.
Energy from the sun is absorbed by producers, also called autotrophs, organisms that are capable
of creating their own food.
Consumers feed on these producers, absorbing both their matter and energy
When these organisms die, they are broken down by decomposers and their organic matter are
deposited in their habitat as part of the inorganic nutrient pool, waiting to be utilized again by the
producers.
Consumers and decomposers are classified as heterotrophs as they need to consume the
organic matter of other organisms to survive.
food chain represents a single series of process of linked feeding relationships. It graphically shows
what eats what in an ecosystem.
Secondary consumers feed on the primary consumers. They can be carnivores (meat eaters) or
omnivores (plant and meat eaters).
The tertiary, or quaternary, consumers are usually the top carnivore in an ecosystem. The top
carnivores are also called apex predators.
Decomposers break down the organic matter from all these organisms when they die and return
these to the soil to be reused as inorganic nutrients for the producers. Common examples of
decomposers are fungi and bacteria.