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Biology chapter 1 Flashcards

Vocabulary: evolution, deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), emergent properties, biosphere, ecosystems, community, population, organism, organs and organ systems, tissues, organelles, cell, molecule, eukaryotic cell, prokaryotic cell, gene, genome, negative feedback, positive feedback, adaptation, inductive reasoning, data, hypothesis, deductive reasoning, controlled experiment, dependent variable, independent variable, theory
Objectives:
After attending lectures and studying the chapter, the student should be able to:
1. Define biology.
2. List and explain the characteristics of life.
a. Define metabolism.
b. Define adaptation.
3. Distinguish between types of organisms by describing the differences between and
give examples of:
a. unicellular and multicellular organisms; and,
b. prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms.
4. List and explain the levels of biological organization.
5. Relating to major concepts in biology, explain what is meant by:
a. "the cell is the basic structural and functional unit of all living things";
b. "the continuity of life depends on the inheritance of biological information";
c. "form fits function";
d. "the unity and diversity of life"; and,
e. "life forms change".
6. Explain why DNA is considered the molecule of inheritance in all organisms.
7. Define evolution.
a. Define population and give examples of characteristics of populations.
b. Explain evolution through natural selection.
c. Explain how adaptations come about through natural selection.
d. Explain why evolution is a central theme in biology.
8. Define science and explain why biology is a science.
9. Distinguish between inductive and deductive reasoning and explain how these
processes of logic are used in science.
10. List in order and explain the logical relationship between the steps of the
scientific method.
11. Explain the difference between hypothesis, theory, and law.
12. Explain the "if . . .

Terms : Hide Images
1663886123EvolutionEvolution is the process of change that has transformed life on Earth0
1663886178DNADeoxyribonucleic acid: a long linear polymer found in the nucleus of a cell and formed from nucleotides and shaped like a double helix1
1663886124BiologyThe scientific study of life2
1663886125Emergent propertiesNew properties that arise with each step upward in the hierarchy of life, owing to the arrangement and interactions of parts as complexity increases.3
1663886126Systems BiologyAn approach to studying biology that aims to model the dynamic behavior of whole biological systems based on a study of the interactions among the system's parts.4
1663886179Eukaryotic CellA type of cell with a membrane-enclosed nucleus and membrane-enclosed organelles. Organisms with eukaryotic cells (protists, plants, fungi, and animals) are called eukaryotes.5
1663886180Prokaryotic CellA type of cell lacking a membrane-enclosed nucleus and membrane-enclosed organelles. Organisms with prokaryotic cells (bacteria and archaea) are called prokaryotes.6
1663886127GeneA discrete unit of hereditary information consisting of a specific nucleotide sequence in DNA (or RNA, in some viruses).7
1663886130BiosphereThe entire portion of Earth inhabited by life; the sum of all the planet's ecosystems.8
1663886131EcosystemsAll the organisms in a given area as well as the abiotic factors with which they interact; one or more communities and the physical environment around them9
1663886132CommunityAll the organisms that inhabit a particular area; an assemblage of populations of different species living close enough together for potential interaction.10
1663886133PopulationA group of individuals of the same species that live in the same area and interbreed, producing fertile offspring.11
1663886134Organisma creature such as a plant, animal or a single-celled life form, or something that has interdependent parts and that is being compared to a living creature12
1663886135OrgansA specialized center of body function composed of several different types of tissues.13
1663886136Organ SystemsA group of organs that work together in performing vital body functions.14
1663886137TissuesAn integrated group of cells with a common structure, function, or both.15
1663886138OrganellesAny of several membrane-enclosed structures with specialized functions, suspended in the cytosol of eukaryotic cells.16
1663886139CellThe part of a neuron that houses the nucleus and most other organelles.17
1663886140MoleculeTwo or more atoms held together by covalent bonds.18
1663886143AdaptationInherited characteristic of an organism that enhances its survival and reproduction in a specific environment.19
1663886181What are the 7 Characteristics of Life?1. Order 2. Regulation 3. Energy Processing 4. Evolutionary Adaptation 5. Response to the Environment 6. Reproduction 7. Growth and Development20
1663886152MetabolismThe totality of an organism's chemical reactions, consisting of catabolic and anabolic pathways, which manage the material and energy resources of the organism.21
1663886155What are the 7 steps of the Scientific Method?1. Observe 2. Research 3. Form a hypothesis 4. Test the hypothesis 5. Analyze results and draw conclusions 6. Report your findings 7. Conduct more research22
1663886161What is the Theory of Natural Selection?A process in which individuals that have certain inherited traits tend to survive and reproduce at higher rates than other individuals because of those traits.23
1663886166What is the molecule that can account for both the unity and the diversity of life?DNA24
1663886167What is the appropriate term for an interacting group of individuals of a single type occupying a defined area?A Population25
1663886184How would you define a Eukaryotic cell?A eukaryotic cell has membrane-enclosed organelles, the largest of which is usually the nucleus26
1663886185How would you define a prokaryotic cell?A prokaryotic cell is simpler and usually smaller, and does not contain a nucleus or other membrane-enclosed organelles27
1663886186What are the 7 Properties/Characteristics of Life1. Order 2. Regulation 3. Energy Processing 4. Evolutionary Adaptation 5. Response to the Environment 6. Reproduction 7. Growth and Development28
1663886187What are the 10 levels of Biological Organization?1. Biosphere 2. Ecosystem 3. Communities 4. Populations 5. Organisms 6. Organs and Organ Systems 7. Tissues 8. Cells 9. Organelles 10. Molecules29
1663886188CellThe lowest level of organization that can perform all activities required for life30
1663886177All the organisms on a campus make up...a community31

Biology chapter 1 Flashcards

Vocabulary: evolution, deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), emergent properties, biosphere, ecosystems, community, population, organism, organs and organ systems, tissues, organelles, cell, molecule, eukaryotic cell, prokaryotic cell, gene, genome, negative feedback, positive feedback, adaptation, inductive reasoning, data, hypothesis, deductive reasoning, controlled experiment, dependent variable, independent variable, theory
Objectives:
After attending lectures and studying the chapter, the student should be able to:
1. Define biology.
2. List and explain the characteristics of life.
a. Define metabolism.
b. Define adaptation.
3. Distinguish between types of organisms by describing the differences between and
give examples of:
a. unicellular and multicellular organisms; and,
b. prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms.
4. List and explain the levels of biological organization.
5. Relating to major concepts in biology, explain what is meant by:
a. "the cell is the basic structural and functional unit of all living things";
b. "the continuity of life depends on the inheritance of biological information";
c. "form fits function";
d. "the unity and diversity of life"; and,
e. "life forms change".
6. Explain why DNA is considered the molecule of inheritance in all organisms.
7. Define evolution.
a. Define population and give examples of characteristics of populations.
b. Explain evolution through natural selection.
c. Explain how adaptations come about through natural selection.
d. Explain why evolution is a central theme in biology.
8. Define science and explain why biology is a science.
9. Distinguish between inductive and deductive reasoning and explain how these
processes of logic are used in science.
10. List in order and explain the logical relationship between the steps of the
scientific method.
11. Explain the difference between hypothesis, theory, and law.
12. Explain the "if . . .

Terms : Hide Images
1663886123EvolutionEvolution is the process of change that has transformed life on Earth0
1663886178DNADeoxyribonucleic acid: a long linear polymer found in the nucleus of a cell and formed from nucleotides and shaped like a double helix1
1663886124BiologyThe scientific study of life2
1663886125Emergent propertiesNew properties that arise with each step upward in the hierarchy of life, owing to the arrangement and interactions of parts as complexity increases.3
1663886126Systems BiologyAn approach to studying biology that aims to model the dynamic behavior of whole biological systems based on a study of the interactions among the system's parts.4
1663886179Eukaryotic CellA type of cell with a membrane-enclosed nucleus and membrane-enclosed organelles. Organisms with eukaryotic cells (protists, plants, fungi, and animals) are called eukaryotes.5
1663886180Prokaryotic CellA type of cell lacking a membrane-enclosed nucleus and membrane-enclosed organelles. Organisms with prokaryotic cells (bacteria and archaea) are called prokaryotes.6
1663886127GeneA discrete unit of hereditary information consisting of a specific nucleotide sequence in DNA (or RNA, in some viruses).7
1663886130BiosphereThe entire portion of Earth inhabited by life; the sum of all the planet's ecosystems.8
1663886131EcosystemsAll the organisms in a given area as well as the abiotic factors with which they interact; one or more communities and the physical environment around them9
1663886132CommunityAll the organisms that inhabit a particular area; an assemblage of populations of different species living close enough together for potential interaction.10
1663886133PopulationA group of individuals of the same species that live in the same area and interbreed, producing fertile offspring.11
1663886134Organisma creature such as a plant, animal or a single-celled life form, or something that has interdependent parts and that is being compared to a living creature12
1663886135OrgansA specialized center of body function composed of several different types of tissues.13
1663886136Organ SystemsA group of organs that work together in performing vital body functions.14
1663886137TissuesAn integrated group of cells with a common structure, function, or both.15
1663886138OrganellesAny of several membrane-enclosed structures with specialized functions, suspended in the cytosol of eukaryotic cells.16
1663886139CellThe part of a neuron that houses the nucleus and most other organelles.17
1663886140MoleculeTwo or more atoms held together by covalent bonds.18
1663886143AdaptationInherited characteristic of an organism that enhances its survival and reproduction in a specific environment.19
1663886181What are the 7 Characteristics of Life?1. Order 2. Regulation 3. Energy Processing 4. Evolutionary Adaptation 5. Response to the Environment 6. Reproduction 7. Growth and Development20
1663886152MetabolismThe totality of an organism's chemical reactions, consisting of catabolic and anabolic pathways, which manage the material and energy resources of the organism.21
1663886155What are the 7 steps of the Scientific Method?1. Observe 2. Research 3. Form a hypothesis 4. Test the hypothesis 5. Analyze results and draw conclusions 6. Report your findings 7. Conduct more research22
1663886161What is the Theory of Natural Selection?A process in which individuals that have certain inherited traits tend to survive and reproduce at higher rates than other individuals because of those traits.23
1663886166What is the molecule that can account for both the unity and the diversity of life?DNA24
1663886167What is the appropriate term for an interacting group of individuals of a single type occupying a defined area?A Population25
1663886184How would you define a Eukaryotic cell?A eukaryotic cell has membrane-enclosed organelles, the largest of which is usually the nucleus26
1663886185How would you define a prokaryotic cell?A prokaryotic cell is simpler and usually smaller, and does not contain a nucleus or other membrane-enclosed organelles27
1663886186What are the 7 Properties/Characteristics of Life1. Order 2. Regulation 3. Energy Processing 4. Evolutionary Adaptation 5. Response to the Environment 6. Reproduction 7. Growth and Development28
1663886187What are the 10 levels of Biological Organization?1. Biosphere 2. Ecosystem 3. Communities 4. Populations 5. Organisms 6. Organs and Organ Systems 7. Tissues 8. Cells 9. Organelles 10. Molecules29
1663886188CellThe lowest level of organization that can perform all activities required for life30
1663886177All the organisms on a campus make up...a community31

Ionic Bonding Quiz Flashcards

Unit 5 Chemical Bonding Test:
• Distinction between elements and compounds; properties of each; same elements may form different compounds
• Reading chemical formulas: compound names, element names, number and ratio of atoms
• Chemical bonds between atoms involve electrons
• Ionic Bonds: result from electron transfer; reading superscript of ions; examples of ionic bonds; types of elements forming ionic bonds; properties of ionic compounds (also found in 2-3)
• Covalent Bonds: result from electron sharing; examples of covalent bonds AND polar covalent bonds; types of elements forming covalent bonds; properties of covalent compounds (also found in 2-3)
• Metals have unique bonds (sea of electrons)
• Ionic and covalent bonds give compounds different properties

Terms : Hide Images
1280422893The force of attraction between positive and negative ions. Metal and nonmetals.Ionic Bond0
1280422894A substance made up of two or more different types of atoms bonded togetherCompound1
1280422895Uses chemical symbols to represent the atoms of the elements and their ratios in a chemical compoundChemical Formula2
1280422896A number written to the right of the chemical symbol and slightly below itSubscript3
1280422897When the last energy level of an atom is full (usually 8 electrons) the atom is stableOctet Rule4
1280422898The number that follows the + or - sign when the ion number is shown. It represents the charge of the ion.Oxidation Number5
1280422899A negative ionAnion6
1280422900A positive ionCation7
1280422901The elements in Groups 3-12 are transition metals and the metals under the staircase.Transition Metals8
1282204583A monatomic ion is an ion that has how many atoms?19
1282204584The force that holds two atoms together is achemical bond10
1282204585Ions are formed when an atom ________ or _________ an electron.gain, lose11
1282204586The electrostatic force that holds oppositely charged particles together is a(n)ionic bond12
1282204587________ are located in the outer most/last energy level of an atom.Valence electrons13
1282204588True or False: A chemical formula is a way of writing the name of a compound using chemical symbols and subscripts to identify the type & number of each elementtrue14
1282204589True or False: Compounds consist of two or more different elements that are physically joined.false; they are chemically joined15
1282204590According to the octet rule, MOST elements are stable when ___________.they have 8 valence electrons.16
1282204591Which of the following is an example of an ionic compound? H2O, CaO, SiO2 or N2O5CaO because it is the only one that contains a metal/cation17
1282204592Which is not an example of a ternary compound? Mg(NO2)2, NH4OH, MgSO4 or SrOSrO. Ternary compounds consist of three or more different elements.18

J.Sharp- Covalent & Ionic bonds, Periodic Table Flashcards

Covalent bonds, ionic bonds, subatomic particles, periodic table vocabulary.

Terms : Hide Images
1100304032covalent, ionic2 types of bonds0
1100304033octet ruleatoms tend to gain, lose, or share electrons in order to acquire a full set of valence electrons (usually 8)1
1100304034form ions and bondthe octet rule helps to explain why atoms2
1100304035covalentbond that forms when electrons are shared between atoms to form a molecule3
1100304036molecular bondsanother name for covalent bonds4
1100304037moleculesa group of atoms held together by covalent bonds5
1100304038unshared pairspairs of electrons in covalent bonds that do not participate in bonding and belong to only 1 atom6
1100304039bonding pairspairs of electrons that are shared between 2 atoms, thus creating a covalent bonds7
1100304040nonmetalscovalent compounds typically form between8
1100304041multiplecovalent compounds, unlike ionic bonds, can form ____________ bonds9
1100304042single bond2 atoms share 2 electrons (1 pair)10
1100304043double bond2 atoms share 4 electrons (2 pairs)11
1100304044triple bond2 atoms share 6 electrons (3 pair)12
1100304045positive and negative ionswhen electrons are transferred, what is formed?13
1100304046cationspositive ions14
1100304047anionsnegative ions15
1100304048ionic bondsforces of attraction between two oppositely charged ions that combine to form a compound16
1100304049neutralionic compounds are electrically17
1100304050metals and nonmetalsionic compounds typically form between18
1100304051monatomic ions"one atom" ions19
1100304052polyatomic ions"many atom" ions20
1100304053intermolecular forcethe force of attraction between molecules21
1100304054protonpositively charged subatomic particle found in the nucleus of an atom22
1100304055electronnegatively charged particle found in electron shells orbiting the nucleus of an atom23
1100304056neutronsubatomic particle that possesses a neutral charge and is found in the nucleus of an atom24
1100304057atomic massaverage sum of masses of protons and neutrons25
1100304058noble gasesgroup 8 of periodic table26
1100304059alkaline earth metalsgroup 2 of periodic table27
1100304060halogensgroup 7 of periodic table28
1100304061alkali metalsgroup 1 of periodic table (with the exception of H, a nonmetal)29
1100304062transition metalsdo not follow the rules for shells and valence electrons30
1100304063perioda row on the periodic table; row # = # of shells an atom has31
1100304064groupa column on the periodic table; column # = # of valence electrons an atom has32
1100304065atomic numbernumber of protons found in the nucleus of an atom33
1100304066energy levelsarrangement of electrons within the electron cloud34
1100304067atomic radiusincreases as you move down a group35
1100304068atomic reactivityincreases as you move up a group36
1100304069isotopeversion of an element with a different number of neutrons37

J.Sharp- Covalent & Ionic bonds, Periodic Table Flashcards

Covalent bonds, ionic bonds, subatomic particles, periodic table vocabulary.

Terms : Hide Images
1100304032covalent, ionic2 types of bonds0
1100304033octet ruleatoms tend to gain, lose, or share electrons in order to acquire a full set of valence electrons (usually 8)1
1100304034form ions and bondthe octet rule helps to explain why atoms2
1100304035covalentbond that forms when electrons are shared between atoms to form a molecule3
1100304036molecular bondsanother name for covalent bonds4
1100304037moleculesa group of atoms held together by covalent bonds5
1100304038unshared pairspairs of electrons in covalent bonds that do not participate in bonding and belong to only 1 atom6
1100304039bonding pairspairs of electrons that are shared between 2 atoms, thus creating a covalent bonds7
1100304040nonmetalscovalent compounds typically form between8
1100304041multiplecovalent compounds, unlike ionic bonds, can form ____________ bonds9
1100304042single bond2 atoms share 2 electrons (1 pair)10
1100304043double bond2 atoms share 4 electrons (2 pairs)11
1100304044triple bond2 atoms share 6 electrons (3 pair)12
1100304045positive and negative ionswhen electrons are transferred, what is formed?13
1100304046cationspositive ions14
1100304047anionsnegative ions15
1100304048ionic bondsforces of attraction between two oppositely charged ions that combine to form a compound16
1100304049neutralionic compounds are electrically17
1100304050metals and nonmetalsionic compounds typically form between18
1100304051monatomic ions"one atom" ions19
1100304052polyatomic ions"many atom" ions20
1100304053intermolecular forcethe force of attraction between molecules21
1100304054protonpositively charged subatomic particle found in the nucleus of an atom22
1100304055electronnegatively charged particle found in electron shells orbiting the nucleus of an atom23
1100304056neutronsubatomic particle that possesses a neutral charge and is found in the nucleus of an atom24
1100304057atomic massaverage sum of masses of protons and neutrons25
1100304058noble gasesgroup 8 of periodic table26
1100304059alkaline earth metalsgroup 2 of periodic table27
1100304060halogensgroup 7 of periodic table28
1100304061alkali metalsgroup 1 of periodic table (with the exception of H, a nonmetal)29
1100304062transition metalsdo not follow the rules for shells and valence electrons30
1100304063perioda row on the periodic table; row # = # of shells an atom has31
1100304064groupa column on the periodic table; column # = # of valence electrons an atom has32
1100304065atomic numbernumber of protons found in the nucleus of an atom33
1100304066energy levelsarrangement of electrons within the electron cloud34
1100304067atomic radiusincreases as you move down a group35
1100304068atomic reactivityincreases as you move up a group36
1100304069isotopeversion of an element with a different number of neutrons37

GCA Environmental Science - Chapter 14: Water Resources Flashcards

Pearson Environmental Science
Chapter 14: Water Resources

Terms : Hide Images
781456762algal bloomthe rapid growth of algae in an area that can cover the surface of the water and block sunlight from reaching plants below0
781456763aquifera spongelike formation of rock, sand, or gravel that holds water1
781456764cultural eutrophicationthe pollution of a body of water as a result of human activity; alos called artificial eutrophication2
781456765daman obstruction placed in a river or stream to blocks its flow3
781456766desalinationthe process of removing salt from seawater, also called desalinization4
781456767fresh waterrelatively pure water; water with few dissolved salts5
781456768groundwaterfresh water found below Earth's surface6
781456769impermeablenot allowing water or other substances to pass through7
781456770nonpoint-source pollutionpollution that comes from many places over a large area8
781456771pathogena disease-causing organism9
781456772permeablehaving spaces or pores that allow water or other substances to pass through10
781456773point-source pollutionpollution that comes from a specific location (e.g. a factory or a sewer pipe)11
781456774recharge zonean area where surface water soaks into the ground and reaches an aquifer12
781456775red tidea harmful algal bloom caused by algae that produce reddish pigments13
781456776reservoiran artificial lake where water for human use is stored14
781456777river systema network of connection streams and rivers15
781456778runoffwater that flows over land and collects in a stream or river16
781456779salinizationthe buildup of salts in the surface layers of soil17
781456780septic systema method of wastewater disposal18
781456781surface waterfresh water found on Earth's surface19
781456782water diversionthe process of moving water from its source to places where humans can use it (e.g. homes and farm fields)20
781456783water tablethe boundary between the zone of aeration and the zone of saturation in an aquifer21
781456784watershedall of the land area that supplies water to a particular river system22
781456785wella channel dug into an aquifer to reach groundwater23
781456786xeriscapinglandscaping using plants adapted to dry conditions24
781456787wastewaterwater that has been used in households, businesses, industries, or public facilities and drained or flushed down the pipes, as well as the polluted runoff from streets and storm drains25

AP Environmental Science: Chapter 6: Water Pollution Flashcards

AP Environmental Science: Chapter 6: Water Pollution Terms and Concepts

Terms : Hide Images
578059031Point SourcePollution from a single, usually easily recognizable source.0
578059032Non-Point SourcePollution that comes from many sources (a general area) rather than a single specific site.1
578059033PathogensType of pollutant, bacteria, virus, contagious diseases. --Sources: medical wastes, animal and human wastes. -Can be non-point, usually the result of improper disposal.2
578059034Organic MatterBiodegradable remains of plants and animals, point and non-point. -Causes eutrophication --Increases BOD, decomposers use up oxygen3
578059035Organic ChemicalsPesticides, herbicides, fertilizers. Solvents, petroleum products. --MOST TOXIC TO LIFE -Some are persistent, both point and non-point, major type.4
578059036Inorganic ChemicalsAcids, salts, toxiic metals. Many are toxic, another MAJOR type. Will not normally break down in nature, difficult to remediate (clean up).5
578059037Physical AgentsSuspended solids and heat. Suspended solids negatively impact bodies of water. Heat from power plants raise temperature of water source (called thermal pollution)6
579366126Thermal PollutionA type of pollution that occurs when heat is released into water or air and produces undesirable effects on the environment.7
579366127Radioactive WastesSources include nuclear power plants, defense plants and medical. Type of waste produced in the nuclear fuel cycle; generally classified as low or high level.8
579366128BioassayThis is a measure of the response of plants (or animals) to toxic substances in soil and water. Test is done to determine the presence/absence of toxins. Doesn't determine the toxin. Usually for point sources.9
579366129MacroinvertebratesBottom dwelling (benthic) visible to the naked eye, used to determine the overall health of a river or stream. Some are intolerant of pollution, while others thrive in polluted water. Because they live on the bottom and can't escape, their absence/presence gives an indication of water quality.10
579366130Pollution Tolerance IndexEvaluation based on the number of different indicator organisms. Divided into four groups based on their intolerance to pollution. The PTI is determined by multiplying the type of organisms by its index (pollution) value.11
579366131EPT RichnessEphmeroptera, plecoptera, and trichoptera richness... -Method of assessing water quality, based on the abundance of different pollution intolerant families that are members of the 3 insect orders.12
579366132Sequential Comparison Index SCIMeasure of the distribution of individuals among the community of organisms collected from the stream/river Relates the diversity and relative abundance of organisms. For this each time a new organism is identified, a new run beings.13
579366133DO Dissolved OxygenA parameter of OWI, 2 sources of dissolved oxygen in streams: atmosphere and algae. -Physical factor: water temperature -Human factor: organic waste ---with high levels of organic matter, which has high nitrogen levels, and it causes eutrophication, which lowers oxygen levels.14
579366134Fecal ColiformThe origin in streams comes from feces of humans and other warm-blooded animals. You need to use various dilutions of sample because you need to be able to see and count the colonies of the fecal coliform. They're not dangerous to human health because they're indicators for other pathogens and occurs naturally in the human digestive tract.15
579366135BOD Biochemical Oxygen DemandMeasure of the quantity of O2 used by microorganisms in an aerobic oxidation. With a very low amount of oxygen from a BOD test, it indicates that organic pollution increases. Some sources of the material that cause high oxygen demand are pulp of paper mills, meat and packing, dead processing and waste treatment.16
579366136TurbidityThe measure of relative clarity of water, measure with the scattering o light (units: NTUS) with excessive turbidity, decrease in ability to support diverse aquatic life and suspended solids clog fish gills, reduce growth rates.17
579366137ToxicityThe measure of how harmful a substance is to life. It depends on dosage and response. (also, solubility, persistence, and chemical interactions.18
579366138DosageThe amount of potentially harmful substances ingested, inhaled, or absorbed into the skin. Whether dosage is harmful is dependent on its size, how often the exposure is, who is exposed, how well the body detoxifies itself, and the genetic make-up that determines the sensitivity to the toxin.19
579366139ResponseTh type and amount of health damage that results from the exposure.20
579366140Genetic Sensitivity CurveThe number of individuals vs. their effects to the same dose of toxicity.21
579366141SolubilityWater soluble compounds can easily move through the environment (influence toxicity)22
579366142PersistenceSome compounds last a long time in the environment (ex. PCBs) they don't break down in nature.23
579366143Synergistic InteractionsThe multiplication of harmful effects caused by 2 or more toxins, magnify the response (chemical interactions)24
579366144BioaccumulationOccurs when toxic molecules are absorbed and stored in specific organs or tissue at levels higher than normal.25
579366145Biological MagnificationThe levels of toxins are magnified as they pass up the food chain. Particularly common with persistent compounds like DDT and PCBs.26
579366146Acute EffectsImmediate harmful reaction (can range from rash to death).27
579366147Chronic ResponsePermanent damage to the body.28
579366148PoisonA chemical that has an LD50 of 50mg/kg of body weight.29
579366149LD50a crude approximation of a chemical toxicity defined as the dose at which 50% of the population dies on exposure (lethal dose).30
579366150EpidemiologyThe study of the health of people exposed to specific toxins.31
579366151Threshold EffectsA level below which effects are not observable and above which effects become apparent. Provide for the LD50 for toxins.32
579366152Ecological GradientA change in the relative abundance of a species or group of species along a line or over an area.33
579366153Dose-Response CurveShow the effects of various dosages of a toxic agent on test organisms. The principal that the effect of a certain chemical on an individual depends on the dose or concentration of that chemical.34
579860056Toxic SubstanceRelated to the LD50 investigation.35
579860057Hazardous SubstanceCause harm by being flammable (gasoline), irritating or damaging the skin or lungs, interfering with oxygen uptake, and causing an allergic reaction.36
579860058AllergensChemicals that cause allergies.37
579860059MutagensChemicals that cause mutations of the DNA.38
579860060TeratogensChemicals that cause birth defects39
579860061CarcinogensChemicals that cause cancer40
579860062MSDSMaterial Safety Data Sheet -Summary documents required by the government to be attached to all potentially hazardous chemicals. The physical and chemical characteristics as well as emergency response instructions. Must be retained with the chemical in the event of a spill or exposure. Not required for consumer goods.41
579860063Risk AssessmentIdentifying hazards and evaluating the statistical probabilities based on past experience, testing and epidemiological studies for substances that have been around for a long time. Compare new and old models.42
579860064Comparative Risk AnalysisRanking various risks. -Ex. Which environmental problem is likely to cause harm to human health and the environment? ---We will fix what will affect us faster43
579860065Risk ManagementReducing or eliminating risk44
579860066Risk CommunicationInforming decision makers and the public about risks. Government then decides what level of risk is acceptable.45
579860067Cost-Benefit AnalysisThe standard method of determining the level of risk, whether the estimated cost for reducing or eliminating the risk outweighs the long term health benefits. -You're going to use the cheaper one46
579860068Safe Drinking Water ActCongress passed in 1973. The U.S. EPA had to regulate drinking water contaminates that may pose health risks. Revised in 1986 and 1996. The EPA set legal limits on levels of certain contaminates in drinking water. These limits reflect both the levels to protect human health and the level of water systems can achieve using the best available technology. Now regulates 87 contaminates (75,000 out there). It gives states the opportunity to set and enforce their own drinking water standards if the standards are at least as strong as the EPA's national standards.47
579860069MCLThe regulations set the legal limit for each contaminant. Maximum contaminant level-- they have to meet it.48
579860070MCLGA health goal, maximum contaminant level goal. At this level, a person could drink 2L water a day for 70 years without the adverse effect.49
579860071PPMUnits, mg/L= parts per million50
579860072PPBUnits, ug/L= parts per billion51
579860073Oxygen Sag CurveThe decline and recovery of oxygen in streams and rivers, the dilution and breakdown of dregradable wastes by bacteria depletes dissolved oxygen. Thermal pollution from a point source also causes this because oxygen saturation declines with increasing temperature.52
579860074OligotrophicReferring to bodies of waters having a low concentration of the chemical elements required for life.53
579860075EutrophicReferring to bodies of water having an abundance of the chemical elements required for life.54
580010773Seasonal TurnoverIn temperate regions where the water mixes. It happens in spring and gall because of the water's unique property; water is densest at 4 deg. C water is warmer or colder than 4 deg. C it's less dense.55
580010774EpilimnionIn the summer of a pond/lake turn over, it is the top layer, warm with high 0256
580010775HypolimnionThe last layer, cold with low 0257
580010776ThermoclineThe transition zone, prevents mixing in the new fall, this disappears and the water mizes. In the spring, the colder upper surface rises to 4C and there's another mixing.58
580010777Contaminant PlumeA contaminant enters the ground water, it flows along with the water and disperses within the water and forms this down gradient (downstream) of the point of entry.59
580702635Specific GravityDifferences in gravity-pollutants can accumulate or concentrate in different parts of the aquifer. Water had a specific gravity of 1.0.60
580702636Acid Mine DrainageDrainage and runoff from coal and hard rock mines impact both surface and groundwater. Can disrupt growth and reproduction and is corrosive to structure.61
580702637PCB'sLasts a long time accumulates in organisms, most toxic, halogen, organic compound, aeromatic, carbon ring and organic benzyne ring. Part of the "dirty dozen", used in electrical equipment and others, banned in 1977. It's an insulator. More dense than water.62
580702638EffluentThe separated liquid that flows out into the drain field (piping and gravel), where aerobic bacteria decompose the organic matter. In wastewater treatment, residential septic systems.63
580702639Residential Septic SystemSeptic tanks- concrete box that holds sewage for +/- 2 days. The calm environment allows dirt and solids to settle out and fall to the bottom. Grease and lighter particles float to the top. Little treatment of waste in tank (few anaerobic bacteria). Water high in nitrates, pathogens released.64
580702640Municipal Treatment SystemDesigned and function to serve the community/city in an efficient and closely monitored process.65
580702641Municipal Treatment-Primary: uses mechanical methods to remediate various sized solid particles. Done by bar screens, then grit chambers. SOlids are removed to solid processing. -Secondary: mostly-activtaed sludge. Water is transferred to large aeration tanks. The effluent is aerated and mixed, stimulates the growth of bacteria (decomposing) that consume organics. Most solids- solid processing with beneficial bacteria- seed sludge. -advanced: effluent is prepared for discharge, usually done by disinfection by a chlorine-based compound to kill pathogens.66
580702642Mobile SourceSource of air pollutants that move from place to place, for example, cars, trucks, buses and trains.67
580702643Heavy MetalsRefers to a number of metals, including lead, mercury, arsenic, and silver (among others) that have a relatively high atomic number (the number of protons in the nucleus of an atom). They are often toxic at relatively low concentrations, causing a variety of environmental problems.68
580702644RCRA 8 MetalsThe resource conversation and recovery act. List of metals include: arsenic, barium, cadmium, chromium, lead, mercury, selenium and silver.69
580702645Priority PollutantsUnder clean water, regulated by EPA. Set of chemical pollutants. EPA must establish ambient water-quality criteria and effluent limitations. The official list was based on a 1977 consent decree that settled a legal challenge to the U.S. EPA's program for controlling hazardous pollutants.70
580702646Toxic PathwayExposure pathways, concentrations of toxic chemicals and populations/numbers, characteristics and habits-- which aid the investigator in evaluating and quantifying exposure in a given situation.71
580702647MethylationDenotes the addition of a methyl group to a substrate or the substitution of an atom or group by a methyl group. It's a form of alkylation with specifically a methyl group, rather than a larger carbon chain, placing a hydrogen atom.72
580702648Waste Water Renovation and Conservation CyclePractice of applying wastewater to the land. In some systems, treated wastewater is applied to agricultural crops, and as the water infiltrates through the soil layer it is naturally purified. Reuse of the water is by pumping it out of the ground for municipal or agricultural uses.73
580702649HypoxicHypoxia or oxygen depletion is a phenomenon that occurs in aquatic environments as dissolved oxygen (DO; molecular oxygen dissolved in the water) becomes reduced in concentration to a point detrimental to aquatic organisms living in the system.74

causes of the civil war Flashcards

the causes of the civil war was declared by the presidents in the past the civil war was declared by Abraham Lincoln. Abraham Lincoln did what he did because he wanted to make himself known for everything that was happening,wich is a bad thing because the civil war divided all the countries and states they also divided familys so that they can take more people from their familys so they can use familys to participate in the civil war.

Terms : Hide Images
1868461073secedeto leave or withdraw0
1868461074sectionalismfavoring the intrest of one section or region over the intrest of the entire country1
1868461075wilmot provisoa document stating that ''neither slavery nor involuntary servitude shall ever exist in any part of the territory''.2
1868461076popular saverigntyThe idea that political power belongs to the people3
1868461077free soil partysupported the wilmot proviso4

Unit 8: The Civil War Flashcards

A Civil War is a war between opposing groups of citizens from the same country. In 1861, the Union (North) and the Confederacy (South) parts of America went to war against each other. After 4 years, in 1865, the Union won. Many people died on both sides, and the South suffered terribly. No one expected the Civil War to be long. It became one of the worst wars in American history. The Civil War began at Fort Sumter in 1861. The fort belonged to the North, or the Union, but it was in South Carolina-deep in the South.

Terms : Hide Images
1550581933Sectional PoloarizationOpposing views on how to settle the issue of slavery. This divided the United States between the North and the South.0
1550581934Popular SovereigntyThe belief that citizens should decide whether to allow slavery or not in an area.1
1550581935SlaveryThe treatment of people as property. People who are denied freedom in this way are said to be enslaved.2
1550581936AbolitionistPeople who worked to end slavery.3
1550581937MonopolyAn economy that is controlled by only one large firm. Ex: The Tea Act during British rule of the English Colonies4
1550581938Free competitionAnyone can enter any area of business if he or she can sell something.5
1550581939Traditional economyA market focused on producing items important to a specific culture.6
1550581940AntebellumOccurring before the Civil War7
1550581941OligopolyWhen only a few large firms control the market.8
1550581942Election of 1860Lincoln (anti-slavery) beat Breckinridge (pro-slavery) to become President of the United States. This greatly angered the South.9
1550581943Kansas-Nebraska Act1854 law that established the territories of Kansas and Nebraska and gave their residents the right whether to allow slavery.10
1550581944North (Union)Anti-slavery states. The government and army of the North came to be called the Union during the Civil War.11
1550581945South (Confederacy)Pro-slavery states. The Confederacy was another name for the 11 states that made up the Confederate State of America.12
1550581946Abraham LincolnPresident during the Civil War. 16th President of the United States.13
1550581947Dred ScottA former slave who sued for his freedom in the Supreme Court.14
1550581948Bleeding KansasFighting that erupted after pro-slavery and anti-slavery settlers both moved into Kansas.15
1550581949Compromise of 1850Series of laws intended to settle the disagreements between free and slave states.16
1550581950Missouri CompromiseLaws enacted in 1820 to maintain balance of power between slave and free states.17
1550581951Causes1) Slavery 2) Election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860 3) South Carolina seceeds18
1550581952Civil WarA war between opposing groups of citizens in the same country.19
1550581953SecedeTo separate from the Union20
1550581954Fort SumterSouth Carolina, 1861. The first battle of the Civil War21
1550581955Fugitive Slave Act1850 law meant to help slaveholders recapture runaway slaves22

APUSH Ch. 17 Review Flashcards

AP US History
American Pageant 13th Ed.
Chapter 17 Review
(Vocab + Questions)
Also used:
http://wikinotes.wikidot.com/chapter-17-13

Terms : Hide Images
1938741821William Henry HarrisonWhig President elected in 1840 who suddenly died after only on month in office0
1938741822John TylerDidn't have Whig beliefs; had a strong independent streak1
1938741823McLeodboasted of helping in the attack on the U.S. ship Caroline and was arrested and condemned to execution2
1938741824Creole (American ship)Ship that was overtaken by 130 slaves; British gave asylum to the slaves (this upset Southern Americans)3
1938741825Aroostook Warlargely fought by lumberjacks fighting on each side over who'd get to chop down the lumber4
1938741826Webster-Ashburton Treaty• Treaty resolving Aroostook War • Roughly split the difference of land • U.S. got Mesabi range in Minnesota5
1938741827Mesabi iron ore rangean extremely valuable piece of land and helped supply the American industrial revolution's need for iron ore to make steel6
1938741828James K. PolkRan for president on a very clear pro-expansion platform7
1938741829MexicoCountry that claimed U.S. stole Texas from them8
1938741830Captain Robert GrayExplored the coast of Columbia River into the heart of the Oregon territory, giving the U.S. a strong claim on that territory9
1938741831Oregon Trailpioneer trail that began in Missouri and crossed the Great Plains into the Oregon Country10
1938741832Election of 1844James K. Polk defeated Henry Clay for President11
1938741833Young HickoryNickame given to James Polk due to his similar beliefs and birthplace as Andrew Jackson12
1938741834Polk's 4-Point Mission1. Lower the tariff 2. Restore the independent treasury (put U.S. money into non-government banks) 3. Clear up the Oregon border issue 4. Get California13
1938741835Robert J. WalkerPolk's Secretary of Treasury who helped lower the tariff from 32% to 25%14
193874183649th parallelline at which the Oregon Territory was drawn in 1846 separating the British and American claims15
1938741837John SlidellSent by James Polk to Mexico City to make an offer to purchase California for $25 million; Mexico declined16
1938741838spot resolutionWhen Abraham Lincoln refused to vote for war with Mexico until he knew who actually owned the disputed land17
1938741839General Stephen W. KearnyMarched wth his 1,700 troops to the New Mexico and Mexico border then to San Diego18
1938741840Captain John C. FremontTook California and proclaimed the "Bear Flag Republic"19
1938741841Commodore SloatCame by boat with U.S. Navy to secure California for good20
1938741842General Zachary Taylorscored victories in Texas; well-known for beating Santa Anna at Buena Vista21
1938741843General Winfield Scott ("Old Rough and Ready")Sent to Mexico city to deliever the coup d'grace (final blow); he conquered Mexico City22
1938741844Nicholas TristDiplomat sent along with Scott's army; his job was to secure a peace deal as soon as Polk's demands were met23
1938741845Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo• Treaty worked out by Trist • Ended the war • America got land • U.S. pay $15 million for land and assume $3.5 million in debts from Mexico • U.S. "forced" Mexico to sell land24
1938741846Mexican CessionLand bought from Mexico including California and the future states of NV, AZ, NM, CO, and UT25
193874184713,000American deaths in the Mexican War26
1938741848Wilmot Provisosuggested that the Mexican Cession lands be closed to slavery27
1938741849Liberty (party)Party that "stole" votes from Henry Clay28
1938741850CanadaBritish colony where Americans regularly aided anti-government rebels29
1938741851Mainestate where "Aroostook War" was fought over a disputed boundary with Canada30
1938741852BritainNation that strongly backed independence for Texas, hoping to turn it into an economic asset and antislavery bastion31
1938741853Conscience WhigsAntislavery Whigs who opposed both the Texas annexation and the Mexican War on moral grounds32
1938741854joint resolutionAct of both houses of Congress by which Texas was annexed33
193874185554° 40'Northern boundary of Oregon territory jointly occupied with Britain, advocated by Democratic party and others as the desired line of American expansion34
1938741856Oregon TrailTwo-thousand-mile-long path along which thousands of Americans journeyed to the Willamette VaHey in the 1840s35
1938741857Manifest Destinythe widespread American belief that God had ordained the United States to occupy all the territory of North America36
1938741858Liberty partySmall antislavery party that took enough votes from Henry Clay to cost him the election of 184437
193874185949° (49th parallel)Final compromise line that settled the Oregon boundary dispute in 184638
1938741860CaliforniaRich Mexican province that Polk tried to buy and Mexico refused to sell39
1938741861Nueces RiverRiver that Mexico claimed as the Texas-Mexico boundary, crossed by Taylor's troops in 184640

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