CHAPTER 1: Environmental Problems, Their Causes, and Sustainability

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Across
  1. 3. is a set of assumptions and values reflecting how you think the world works and what you think your role in the world should be.
  2. 6. competition for limited resources among different species places a limit on how much their populations can grow.
  3. 14. which are our beliefs about what is right and wrong with how we treat the environment.
  4. 16. study of the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services.
  5. 17. a group of organisms with distinctive traits and, for sexually reproducing organisms, can mate and produce fertile offspring.
  6. 18. energy from the sun.
  7. 19. is the ability of the earth’s various natural systems and human cultural systems and economies to survive and adapt to changing environmental conditions indefinitely.
  8. 21. is the whole of a society’s knowledge, beliefs, technology, and practices, and human cultural changes have had profound effects on the earth.
  9. 22. occurs when people are unable to meet their basic needs for adequate food, water, shelter, health, and education.
  10. 23. it is the management of natural resources with the goal of minimizing resource waste and sustaining resource supplies for current and future generations.
  11. 24. are single, identifiable sources.
Down
  1. 1. an interdisciplinary study of how humans interact with the environment of living and nonliving things.
  2. 2. are dispersed and often difficult to identify.
  3. 3. a social movement dedicated to protecting the earth's life-support systems for us and all other formsof life.
  4. 4. is anything obtained from the environment to meet our needs and wants.
  5. 5. are materials and energy in nature that are essential or useful to humans.
  6. 7. The highest rate at which a renewable resource can be used indefinitely without reducing its available supply.
  7. 8. the astounding variety of different organisms, the genes they contain, the ecosystems in which they exist, and the natural services they provide have yielded countless ways for life to adapt to changing environmental conditions throughout the earth’s history.
  8. 9. is any in the environment that is harmful to the health, survival, or activities of humans or other organisms.
  9. 10. the amount of biologically productive land and water needed to supply the people in a particular country or area with resources and to absorb and recycle the wastes and pollution produced by such resource use.
  10. 11. is using a resource over and over in the same form.
  11. 12. can be replenished through natural processes as long as it is not used up faster than it is renewed.
  12. 13. is a set of organisms interacting with one another and with their environment of nonliving matter and energy within a defined area or volume.
  13. 15. study of how organisms interact with one another and with their nonliving environment.
  14. 20. involves collecting waste materials and processing them into new materials.