Environmental Impact of the Industrial Revolution
[2023-01-16 10:57:47]
Gas emissions from fuel and volcanic burning [Today is also included: power station, car emissions, industry]
Rainfall (rain, snow) contains human-generated air pollutants and acids formed by the reaction of oxygen and water
Solar radiation, wind and water, atmospheric gases, clouds, volcanic gases, and human activities
81% is absorbed by greenhouse gases and reemerged, making the surface of the earth warmer. It is a problem to raise the greenhouse effect
Source: industrial waste (heavy metals, phosphates, asbestos, nitrates, solvents, petrochemicals), fertilizers and pesticides, untreated sewage, oil spills, ocean dumping, acid rain, underground storage leaks
Finally, let's look at the environmental impact of the Industrial Revolution. London soot, contaminated river, fear of nuclear dust, and a new threat to the atmosphere. It will also look at how business and political activists face past environmental problems and often solve them, and lay the foundation for a cleaner future. In the industrial revolution, Professor Alit combined his skills as a storyteller, his story as a historian and his expertise, and a wonderful scholarship and inspirational image from the Smithsonian Institution for this. The period provided persuasive insight. Alit really appreciates the complexity of the industrial revolution and emphasizes good and evil.
Industrialization and Immigration Impact on the Environment The Industrial Revolution has changed the ability of mankind to rebuild the global environment. Forest destruction is increasing worldwide. The same is true for pollution of water released to lakes and streams by chemicals and agriculture, and air pollution caused by the combustion of large amounts of coal. The emergence of railways and steamboats also accelerated the spread of animals and plants to new areas of the world. This is an extension of Colombian biotic exchange that took place in the previous era. New plants (such as corn, wheat, cassava, etc.) spread to areas that had not been known before, and supported a substantial increase in the population. However, the environment also had an adverse effect. For example, in 1859 Australian farmers introduced several rabbits for hunting. Within a few years, millions of rabbits jumped over the continent and destroyed the crops