APES Study Guide

Unit 2 – Science, Systems, Matter, and Energy & Soil and Geology

In this unit we will begin studying the earth’s physical characteristics and how man’s influence affects the physical nature of the earth.

Reading

Miller, Living in the Environment, 15th Edition, Chapters 2 (pg 28-48) and Chapter 15 (pg 335-353)

Major Assignments

Soil Lab

Biogeochemical Cycle Project

Vocabulary (65 terms)

Chapter 2

scientific data

experiment

scientific hypothesis

model

scientific theory

scientific law

accuracy

precision

scientific methods

serendipity

variables

control

double blind

placebo

inductive reasoning

deductive reasoning

frontier science

consensus science

technology

system

structure

function

mental models

conceptual models

graphic models

physical models

mathematical models

input

accumulation

flow (throughput)

output

sinks

feedback loop

positive feedback loop

negative feedback loop

homeostasis

time delay

synergistic interaction

synergy

chaos

butterfly effect

elements

compounds

mixtures

atoms

molecules

protons

neutrons

electrons

nucleus

atomic number

mass number

isotopes

chemical formula

organic compounds

genes

genomes

gene mutations

chromosomes

inorganic compounds

crust

mineral

rock

matter quality

high-quality matter

low-quality matter

entropy

energy

kinetic energy

electromagnetic radiation

ionizing radiation

non-ionizing radiation

heat

temperature

potential energy

energy quality

high-quality energy

low-quality energy

chemical reaction

law of conservation of matter

law of conservation of matter

and energy

nuclear change

natural radioactive decay

radioisotopes

gamma rays

alpha particles

beta particles

half-life

nuclear fission

critical mass

chain reaction

nuclear fusion

law of conservation of energy

(1st law of thermodynamics)

2nd law of thermodynamics

high-waste societies

matter-recycling society

low-waste society

Chapter 15

soil

soil horizon

soil profile

humus

infiltration

leaching

soil texture

loam

mineral resource

ore

identified resource

undiscovered resource

reserve

overburden

spoil

open-pit mining

dredging

strip mining

depletion

reserve-to-production ratio

gangue

benefaction

tailings

smelting

soil erosion

desertification

salinization

waterlogging

soil conservation

conventional-tillage farming

conservation-tillage farming

terracing

contour farming

strip cropping

alley cropping

agroforestry

windbreak

shelterbelt

organic fertilizer

commercial inorganic fertilizer

animal manure

green manure

compost

crop rotation

Unit Objectives:

1.  Summarize the rock cycle and be able to identify the major rock forming minerals. Distinguish between igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks.

2.  Know six soil layers, four soil types, and four soil textures. Distinguish between porosity and permeability, and describe how humus and pH contribute to soil fertility.

3.  Describe the world and U.S. problems with soil erosion. Explain how U.S. soil erosion issues differ from those of the rest of the world.

4.  Name four mineral resources, and give one example of each. List four mineral products found in a typical home.

5.  Describe plate tectonics, and distinguish between the three types of plate boundaries.

6.  Explain how seawater is a potential source of many metals, and how this resource could be exploited.

7.  List the environmental impacts of extracting, processing, and using mineral resources.

8.  Minerals are essentially nonrenewable resources. Many are being exploited at rates that will deplete them within a generation or two. What are some of the economic and social effects of resource deletion? How can society extend the lifetime of limited resources?

Sites of Interest

Important Dates

Vocabulary quiz –

Vocabulary quiz –

Unit Test –