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9889387354First Law of Thermodynamics:energy is neither created nor destroyed, but may be converted from one form to another.0
9889388353Second Law of Thermodynamics:when energy is changed from one form to another, some useful energy is always degraded into lower quality energy (usually heat).1
9889389562Ionizing radiation:radiation w/enough energy to free electrons from atoms forming ions, may cause cancer (ex. gamma, X-rays, UV).2
9889406107High Quality Energy: organized & concentrated, can perform useful work (ex. fossil fuels & nuclear).Low Quality Energy: disorganized, dispersed (ex. heat in ocean or air/wind, solar).3
9889407745Natural radioactive decay:unstable radioisotopes decay releasing gamma rays, alpha & beta particles (ex. Radon).4
9889413085Half-life:the time it takes for 1⁄2 of the mass of a radioisotope to decay. A radioactive isotope must be stored for approximately 10 half-lives until it decays to a safe level.5
9889416462Nuclear Fission:nuclei of isotopes split apart when struck by neutrons.6
9889417213Nuclear Fusion:2 isotopes of light elements (H) forced together at high temperatures till they fuse to form a heavier nucleus. Happens in the Sun, very difficult to accomplish on Earth, prohibitively expensive.7
9889419010Ore:a rock that contains a large enough concentration of a mineral making it profitable to mine.8
9889424451Mineral Reserve:identified deposits currently profitable to extract.9
9889425125Surface mining:cheaper, can remove more minerals, less hazardous to workers.10
9889425126Humus:organic, dark material remaining after decomposition by microorganisms.11
9889428117Leaching:removal of dissolved materials from soil by water moving downwards through soil.12
9889428943Loam:perfect agricultural soil with equal portions of sand, silt, and clay.13
9889430074Soil Conservation Methods:conservation tillage, crop rotation, contour plowing, organic fertilizers.14
9889431491Soil Salinization:in arid regions, water evaporates leaving salts behind. (ex. Fertile crescent, southwestern US)15
9889432430Water Logging:water completely saturates soil starves plant roots of oxygen, rots roots16
9889434881Hydrologic Cycle Components:evaporation, transpiration, runoff, condensation, precipitation, and infiltration.17
9889434882Watershed:all of the land that drains into a body of water.18
9889437100Aquifer:underground layers of porous rock allow water to move slowly.19
9889438004Cone of Depression:lowering of the water table around a pumping well.20
9889438971Salt Water Intrusion:near the coast, overpumping of groundwater causes saltwater to move into the aquifer.21
9889448945ENSO:El Nino Southern Oscillation, trade winds weaken & warm surface water moves toward South America. Diminished fisheries off South America, drought in western Pacific, increased precipitation in southwestern North America, fewer Atlantic hurricanes.22
9889450291La Nina:"Normal" year, easterly trade winds and ocean currents pool warm water in the western Pacific, allowing upwelling of nutrient rich water off the West coast of South America.23
9889451127Nitrogen Fixation:because atmospheric N cannot be used directly by plants, it must first be converted into ammonia by bacteria. Ammonification: decomposers covert organic waste into ammonia.24
9889452022Nitrification:ammonia is converted to nitrate ions (NO3-).25
9889452023Assimilation:inorganic N is converted into organic molecules such as DNA/amino acids & proteins.26
9889467394Denitrification:bacteria convert ammonia back into N.27
9889468385Phosphorus:does not exist as a gas; released by weathering of phosphate rocks, it is a major limiting factor for plant growth. Phosphorus cycle is slow, and not atmospheric.28
9889491332Photosynthesis:plants convert CO2 (atmospheric carbon) into complex carbohydrates (glucose C6H12O6).29
9889491346Aerobic Respiration:oxygen consuming producers, consumers & decomposers break down complex organic compounds & convert C back into CO2.30
9889492243Biotic:the living components of an ecosystem.31
9889493554Abiotic:the nonliving components of an ecosystem. Producer/Autotroph: organisms that make their own food—photosynthetic life (plants). 32
9889495219Trophic Levels:producers → primary consumer → secondaryconsumer → tertiary consumer.33
9889495220Energy Flow through Food Webs:10% of the usable energy is transferred to the next34
9889495889trophic level. Reason:usable energy lost as heat (2nd law of Thermodynamics), not all biomass is digested & absorbed, predators expend energy to catch prey.35
9889496608Primary succession:development of communities in a lifeless area not recently inhabited by life (ex. lava flow, retreating glacier).36
9889497679Secondary succession:life progresses where soil remains (ex. clear-cut/burned forest, old farm, vacant lot).37
9889498782Mutualism:symbiotic relationship where both organisms benefit.38
9889507936Commensalism:symbiotic relationship where one organism benefits & the other is unaffected.39
9889509203Parasitism:relationship in which one organism (the parasite) obtains nutrients at the expense of the host.40
9889510819Carrying Capacity:the number of individuals that can be sustained in an area.41
9889510820r-strategist:reproductive strategy in which organisms reproduce early, bear many small, unprotected offspring (ex. insects, mice).42
9889513504K-strategist:reproductive strategy in which organisms reproduce late, bear few, cared for offspring (ex. humans, elephants).43
9889514335Natural Selection:organisms that possess favorable adaptations pass them onto the next generation.44
9889515065Thomas Malthus:"human population cannot continue to increase. Consequences will be war, famine & pestilence (disease)."45
9889515066Doubling Time:(rule of 70) doubling time equals 70 divided by percent growth rate. (ex. a population growing at 5% annually doubles in 70 ÷ 5 = 14 years)46
9889515815Replacement Level Fertility:the number of children a couple must have to replace themselves (averages 2.1 in more developed nations, 2.7 in less developed nations).47
9889516477World Population:a little over 6 billion.48
9889538229Demographic Transition Model:Preindustrial stage, Transitional stage, Industrial stage, Postindustrial stage49
9889538862Preindustrial stage:birth & death rates high, population grows slowly, infant mortality high.50
9889541545Transitional stage:death rate (infant mortality) lower, birth rates remain high, better health care, population grows fast.51
9889549611Industrial stage:decline in birth rate, population growth slows.52
9889550665Postindustrial stage:low birth & death rates.53
9889551809Age Structure Diagrams:broad base → rapid growth; narrow base → negative growth; uniform shape → zero growth54
9889553331Most Populous Nations:(1) China; (2) India; (3) U.S.; (4) Indonesia55
9889553332Low Status of Women:Most important factor keeping population growth rates high.56
9889554480Methods to Decrease Birth Rates:family planning, contraception, economic rewards & penalties.57
9889555414Composition of Water on Earth:97.5% seawater, 2.5% freshwater.58
9889556387Aquaculture:farming aquatic species, commonly salmon, shrimp, tilapia, oysters.59
9889556388Point Source:source from specific location such as pipe or smokestack60
9889558674Non-Point Source (Area/Dispersed Source):source spread over an area such as agricultural/feedlot runoff, urban runoff, traffic.61
9889558675Primary Sewage Treatment:first step of sewage treatment; eliminates most particulate material from raw sewage using grates, screens, and gravity (settling).62
9889562222Secondary Sewage Treatment:second step of sewage treatment; bacteria breakdown organic waste, aeration accelerates the process.63
9889563659BOD:Biological Oxygen Demand, amount of dissolved oxygen needed by aerobic decomposers to break down organic materials.64
9889563672Eutrophication:rapid algal growth (algal bloom) caused by an excess of nitrogen & phosphorus, blocks sunlight, causing the death/decomposition of aquatic plants, decreasing dissolved oxygen (DO), suffocating fish.65
9889564683Hypoxia:water with very low dissolved oxygen levels, the end result of eutrophication, for example. CAFE standards: Corporate Average Fuel Economy standards enacted into law in 1975, established fuel efficiency standards for passenger cars and light trucks. The fuel economy ratings for a manufacturer's entire line of passenger cars must currently average at least 27.5 mpg for the manufacturer to comply with the standard. Primary Air Pollutants: produced by humans & nature (CO, CO2, SO2, NO, hydrocarbons, particulates).66
9889566375Secondary Air Pollutants:formed by reaction of primary pollutants.67
9889567072Particulate Matter:sources include burning fossil fuels and car exhaust. Effects include reduced visibility, respiratory irritation. Methods of reduction include filtering, electrostatic precipitators, alternative energy).68
9889568864Nitrogen Oxides:(NOx) Major source is auto exhaust. Primary and secondary effects include acidification of lakes, respiratory irritation, leads to smog and ozone. Reduced using catalytic converters.69
9889570959Equation for acid formation:NO + O2 → NO2 + H2O → HNO3.70
9889572405Ozone:Secondary pollutant, NO2 + UV → NO + O; O + O2 → O3, with VOCs. Causes respiratory irritation and plant damage. Reduced by reducing NO emissions and VOCs.71
9889573837Sulfur Oxides:(SOx) Primary source is coal burning. Primary and secondary effects include acid deposition, respiratory irritation, plant damage. Reduction methods include: scrubbers, burn low sulfur fuel. Equation for acid formation: SO2 + O2 → SO3 + H2O → H2SO472
9889578171Carbon Dioxide:(CO2) Sources include the combustion of fossil fuels. Effects: greenhouse gas-contributes to global warming. Reduction accomplished by increased fuel efficiency (gas mileage), mass transit (reduction).73
9889580769Carbon Monoxide:(CO) Sources include incomplete combustion of fossil fuels. Effects: binds to hemoglobin reducing bloods ability to carry O2. Reduction accomplished by catalytic converters, oxygenated fuel, mass transit (reduction).74
9889581596Photochemical Smog:formed by chemical reactions involving sunlight (NO, VOC, O2)75
9889582193Acid Deposition:caused by sulfuric and nitric acids resulting in lowered pH of surface waters76
9889583237Greenhouse Gases:Most significant: H2O, CO2, methane (CH4), CFCs. Trap outgoing infrared energy (heat) causing earth to warm.77
9889584506Greenhouse Effect:a vital process, required for life to exist on Earth. If accelerated, bad, leads to global warming.78
9889585860Effects of Global Warming:rising sea level (due to thermal expansion not melting ice), extreme weather, droughts (famine), and extinctions.79
9889585884Ozone Depletion:caused by CFCs, methyl chloroform, carbon tetrachloride, halon, methyl bromide all of which attack stratospheric ozone. Negative effects of ozone depletion include increased UV, skin cancer, cataracts, and decreased plant growth.80
9889587179Municipal Solid Waste:is mostly paper and mostly put into landfills.81
9889588510Sanitary Landfill:problems include leachate, which is solved using a liner with a collection system; methane gas, which may be collected and burned; and the volume of garbage, which may be compacted and/or reduced.82
9889589513Incineration:Advantages-volume of waste reduced by 90% and waste heat can be used. Disadvantages-toxic emissions (polyvinyl chloride, dioxin), scrubbers and electrostatic precipitators needed, ash disposal.83
9889590831Best Solution for Waste Problem:reduce the amount of waste at the source.84
9889591939Brownfield:abandoned industrial sites.85
9889592621Keystone Species:species whose role in an ecosystem is more important than others.86
9889595177Indicator Species:species that serve as early warnings that an ecosystem is being damaged. In Natural Ecosystems: 50-90% of pest species are kept under control by: predators, diseases, parasites.87
9889597553Major Insecticide Groups:chlorinated hydrocarbons—ex. DDT; organophosphates—ex. malathion; carbamates—ex. aldicarb88
9889599756Pesticide Pros:saves lives from insect transmitted disease, increases food supply, and increases profits for farmers. Cons: genetic resistance, ecosystem imbalance, pesticide treadmill, persistence, bioaccumulation, and biological magnification.89
9889600704Natural Pest Control:better agricultural practices, genetically resistant plants, natural enemies, and biopesticides, sex attractants.90
9889602454Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs):new organisms created by altering the genetic material (DNA) of existing organisms; usually in an attempt to remove undesirable or create desirable characteristics in the new organism.91
9889605583Electricity Generation:steam, from water boiled by fossils fuels or nuclear energy, or falling water is used to turn a generator.92
9889606698Petroleum (Crude Oil) Formation:microscopic aquatic organisms in sediments converted by heat & pressure into a mixture of hydrocarbons.93
9889607367Petroleum Pros:cheap, easily transported, high-quality energy. Cons: reserves depleted soon, pollution during drilling, transport and refining, land subsidence, burning oil produces CO2.94
9889609838Coal Formation:prehistoric plants buried un-decomposed in oxygen-depleted water of swamps/bogs converted by heat and pressure. Ranks of Coal: peat, lignite, bituminous coal, anthracite coal. Nuclear Reactor: consists of a core, control rods, moderator, steam generator, turbine, containment building.95
9889610632Alternate Energy Sources:wind, solar, waves, biomass, geothermal, fuel cells96
9889612408Remediation:return a contaminated area to its original state.97
9889613156LD-50:the amount of a chemical that kills 50% of the animals in a test population98
9889614894Troposphere:first layer of atmosphere 0-10 miles above the Earth's surface. Contains weather, greenhouse gases (bad ozone).99
9889615708Stratosphere:second layer of atmosphere 10-30 miles above the Earth's surface. Contains protective ozone layer (good ozone).100
9889616854Inversion Layer (Temperature Inversion):a warm layer of air above a cooler layer traps pollutants close to the Earth's surface.101
9889617915Mutagen:substances that cause changes in DNA; may result in hereditary changes.102
9889619687Teratogen:substances that cause fetus deformities (birth defects).103
9889620769Carcinogen:substances that cause cancer.104
9889621688Dioxin:one of the most toxic human-made chemicals. Stable, long-lived, by-product of herbicide production enters environment as fallout from the incineration of municipal and medical waste and persists for many years.105
9889622426PCBs (Polychlorinated Biphenyls):Stable, long-lived, carcinogenic chlorinated hydrocarbons. Produced by the electronics industry.106
9889623560Multiple Use Public Lands:National Forest & National Resource lands.107
9889624665Moderately Restricted Use Public Lands:National Wildlife Refuges108
9889625769Restricted Use Public Lands:National Parks & National Wilderness Preservation System109
9889626712Divergent Plate Boundaries:tectonic plates spreading apart, new crust being formed (ex. mid-ocean ridges, rift valleys).110
9889627383Convergent Plate Boundaries:tectonic plates with the oldest crustal material on Earth moving together, one moving under another (ex. mid-ocean trenches). Mineral deposits and volcanoes are most abundant at convergent plate boundaries111
9889628210Transform Fault:tectonic plates sliding past one another (ex. San Andreas fault).112
9889629556Most Endangered Species:have a small range, require large territory, have long generations, have a very specialized niche, or live on an island.113
9889630356Atlantic Salmon:interbreeding with and competition from escaped farm-raised salmon from the aquaculture industry threaten the wild salmon population.114
9889631221California Condor:reasons for decline include shootings, poisoning, lead poisoning, collisions with power lines, egg collecting, pesticides, habitat loss, and the decline of large and medium-size native mammals due to encroachments of agriculture and urbanization.115
9889632426Delhi Sands Flower-Loving Fly:a 1-inch long insect currently restricted to only 12 known populations in San Bernardino and Riverside counties. An estimated 98% of its habitat has been converted to residential, agricultural, and commercial use.116
9889633058Florida Panther:hunting and development that resulted in habitat loss and fragmentation.117
9889633973Gray Wolf:subject of predator eradication programs sponsored by the Federal government. Prior to Endangered Species Act (1973), exterminated from the lower 48 states except for a few hundred inhabiting extreme northeastern Minnesota and a small number on Isle Royale, Michigan118
9889650389Grizzly Bear:conflict with humans and development that resulted in habitat loss and fragmentation119
9889666645Piping Plover:predation and human disturbance are thought to be the main causes of the plover's decline. It is listed as endangered in the Great Lakes region and as threatened in the Great Plains and on the Atlantic coast120
9889668456Manatee:initial population decreases resulted from overharvesting for meat, oil, and leather. Today, heavy mortality occurs from accidental collisions with boats and barges, and from canal lock operations.121
9889669406Whooping Crane:drainage of wetlands, conversion of grasslands to agriculture, and hunting for feathers. NOT Endangered Species122
9889671282American Alligator:overhunting and destruction of habitat caused original listing, removed from the list of endangered species by the Fish and Wildlife Service in 1987.123
9889671283Bald Eagle:ingested DDT by eating contaminated fish. The pesticide caused the shells of the bird's eggs to thin and resulted in nesting failures. Loss of nesting habitat and hunting for feathers also contributed to the population decline. Reclassified from endangered to threatened (1995).124
9889672369Peregrine Falcon:ingested DDT by eating smaller birds, which had eaten contaminated prey. The pesticide caused the shells of the bird's eggs to thin and resulted in nesting failures. Removed from the list of endangered species by the Fish and Wildlife Service in August 1999.125
9889673194Gray Whale:the eastern North Pacific stock of gray whale has the distinction of being the first population of a marine mammal species to be removed from the List of Endangered and Threatened Species. 126
9889674322Biome:large distinct terrestrial region having similar climate, soil, plants & animals.127
9889680205Tropical Rain Forests:characterized by the greatest diversity of species, believed to include many undiscovered species. Occur near the equator. Soils tend to be low in nutrients. Distinct seasonality: winter is absent, and only two seasons are present (rainy and dry).128
9889681042Temperate Forests:occur in eastern North America, Japan, northeastern Asia, and western and central Europe. Dominated by tall deciduous trees. Well-defined seasons include a distinct winter. Logged extensively, only scattered remnants of original temperate forests remain.129
9889683363Boreal Forests or Taiga:represent the largest terrestrial biome. Dominated by needleleaf, coniferous trees. Found in the cold climates of Eurasia and North America: two-thirds in Siberia with the rest in Scandinavia, Alaska, and Canada. Seasons are divided into short, moist, and moderately warm summers and long, cold, and dry winters. Extensive logging may soon cause their disappearance.130
9889690643Temperate Shrub Lands:occurs along the coast of Southern California and the Mediterranean region. Characterized by areas of Chaparral-miniature woodlands dominated by dense stands of shrubs.131
9889691494Savannas:grassland with scattered individual trees. Cover almost half the surface of Africa and large areas of Australia, South America, and India. Warm or hot climates where the annual rainfall is 20-50 inches per year. The rainfall is concentrated in six or eight months of the year, followed by a long period of drought when fires can occur.132
9889692649Temperate Grasslands:dominated by grasses, trees and large shrubs are absent. Temperatures vary more from summer to winter, and the amount of rainfall is less than in savannas. Temperate grasslands have hot summers and cold winters. Occur in South Africa, Hungary, Argentina, the steppes of the former Soviet Union, and the plains and prairies of central North America.133
9889693374Deserts:covers about one fifth of the Earth's surface and occur where rainfall is less than 50 cm/year. Most deserts occur at low latitudes, have a considerable amount of specialized vegetation, as well as specialized animals. Soils have abundant nutrients, need only water to become productive, and have little or no organic matter. Common disturbances include occasional fires or cold weather, and sudden, infrequent, but intense rains that cause flooding.134
9889694227Tundra:treeless plains that are the coldest of all the biomes. Occur in the arctic and Antarctica. Dominated by lichens, mosses, sedges, and dwarfed shrubs Characterized by extremely cold climate, permanently frozen ground (permafrost) low biotic diversity, simple vegetation structure, limitation of drainage, short season of growth and reproduction.135
9889695344Wetlands:areas of standing water wet all or most of the year that support aquatic plants including marshes, swamps, and bogs. Species diversity is very high. Includes bogs, swamps, sloughs, marshes136
9889695982Fresh Water:defined as having a low salt concentration (less than 1%). Plants and animals are adjusted to the low salt content and would not be able to survive in areas of high salt concentration (i.e., ocean). There are different types of freshwater regions: ponds and lakes, streams and rivers, and estuaries. Oceans: the largest of all the ecosystems. The ocean regions are separated into separate zones: intertidal, pelagic, abyssal, and benthic. All four zones have a great diversity of species. Places to Know137
9889696816Chernobyl, Ukraine:April 26, 1986, unauthorized safety test (irony), leads to fire and explosion at nuclear power plant—millions exposed to unsafe levels of radiation.138
9889697390Three-Mile Island, Pennsylvania:March 29, 1979, nuclear power plant loses cooling water 50% of core melts, radioactive materials escape into atmosphere, near meltdown (disaster).139
9889698228Yucca Mountain, Nevada:controversial as proposed site for permanent storage of high-level nuclear waste, 70-miles northwest of Las Vegas, near volcano and earthquake faults.140
9889698229Aral Sea, Uzbekistan/Kazakhstan (former Soviet Union):large inland sea is drying up as a result of water diversion.141
9889701889Love Canal, NY:chemicals buried in old canal, school and homes built over it led to birth defects and cancers.142
9889702659Aswan High Dam, Egypt:the silt that made the Nile region fertile fills the reservoir. Lack of irrigation controls causes waterlogging and salinization. The parasitic disease schistosomiasis thrives in the stagnant water of the reservoir.143
9889703650Three Gorges Dam, China:world's largest dam on Yangtze River will drown ecosystems, cities, archeological sites, fragment habitats, and displace 2 million people.144
9889703651Ogallala Aquifer:world's largest aquifer; under parts of Wyoming, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Texas (the Midwest). Holds enough water to cover the U.S. with 1.5 feet of water. Being depleted for agricultural and urban use.145
9889706283Minamata, Japan:mental impairments, birth defects, and deaths were caused by mercury dumped in Minamata Bay by factory. Mercury entered humans through their diet (fish).146
9889707581Bhopal, India:December 2,1984, methyl isocyanate released accidentally by Union Carbide pesticide plant kills over 5,000. 147
9889708149Safe Drinking Water Act:set maximum contaminant levels for pollutants that may have adverse effects on human health.148
9889709903Valdez, Alaska:March 24, 1989, tanker Exxon Valdez hits submerged rocks in Prince William Sound—worst oil spill in US waters.149
9889711358Ocean Dumping Ban Act:bans ocean dumping of sewage sludge & industrial waste.150
9889712493National Wild and Scenic Rivers Act:protects rivers with due to aesthetic, recreational, wildlife, historical, or cultural reasons.151
9889712911Clean Water Act:set maximum permissible amounts of water pollutants that can be discharged into waterways. Aim: to make surface waters swimmable and fishable.152
9889713679Surface Mining Control & Reclamation Act:requires coal strip mines to reclaim the land.153
9889715025National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA):Environmental Impact Statements must be done before any project affecting federal lands can be started.154
9889715984Clean Air Act:Set emission standards for cars, and limits for release of air pollutants.155
9889717146Kyoto Protocol:controlling global warming by setting greenhouse gas emissions targets for developed countries.156
9889717725Montreal Protocol:phase out of ozone depleting substances.157
9889717729Resource Conservation & Recovery Act (RCRA):controls hazardous waste with a cradle to grave system.158
9889718551Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation & Liability Act (CERCLA):The "Superfund" act, designed to identify and clean up abandoned hazardous waste dumpsites.159
9889726605Endangered Species Act:identifies threatened and endangered species in the US, and puts their protection ahead of economic considerations.160
9889727477Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species:(CITES) lists species that cannot be commercially traded as live specimens or wildlife products.161
9889727478Lacey Act:prohibits interstate transport of wild animals dead or alive without federal permit.162
9889728753U.S. Marine Mammal Protection Act:prohibits taking marine mammals in U.S. waters and by U.S. citizens, and the importing marine mammals and marine mammal products into the U.S. Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act: regulates the effectiveness of pesticides.163
9889730019Food Quality Protection Act:set pesticide limits in food, & all active and inactive ingredients must be screened for estrogenic/endocrine effects.164
9889731360Low-Level Radioactive Policy Act:all states must have facilities to handle low-level radioactive wastes.165
9889731361Nuclear Waste Policy Act:US government must develop a high level nuclear waste site by 2015 (see Yucca Mountain). People to Know166
9889733045Rachel Carson:published Silent Spring in 1962; documented the environmental damage done by DDT and other pesticides. Which heightened public awareness at the start of the modern environmental movement.167
9889733898John Muir:founded Sierra Club in 1892; fought unsuccessfully to prevent the damming of the Hetch Hetchy Valley in Yosemite National Park.168
9889733899Gifford Pinchot:first chief of the US Forest Service; advocated managing resources for multiple use using principles of sustainable yield.169
9889734795Garrett Hardin:published "The Tragedy of the Commons" in the journal Science in 1968; argued that rational people will exploit shared resources (commons).170
9889736810Aldo Leopold:wrote A Sand County Almanac published a year after his death in 1948; promoted a "Land Ethic" in which humans are ethically responsible for serving as the protectors of nature.171
9889736811Sherwood Rowland & Mario Molina:in 1974, determine that CFCs destroy stratospheric (good) ozone.172

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