SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Renewable and
Nonrenewable Resources
Environment and Ecology
Standards 4.2 – A
1. Natural Resources
All of the Earth’s organisms, air, water,
and soil, as well as materials such as
oil, coal, and ore that are removed from
the ground.
Separated into two broad categories:
 Renewable resources
 Nonrenewable resources
2. Renewable Resources
Are any resource
that cycles or can be
replaced within a
human life span.
Examples include:
water, crops, wind,
soil, sunlight,
animals, etc…
a. Food and fiber – are
renewable agricultural
resources that can be
harvested or raised
indefinitely…
… unless their use
exceeds the rate they
can be replaced.
b. Soil – a mixture of
living organisms
and dirt.
Even though it
initially takes
thousands of years
to form, the rate at
which soil can
regenerate
depends on the
climate of an area.
Renewable and nonrenewable resources notes
c. Wind – caused by the
uneven heating of the
Earth. Not only
renewable but
inexhaustible.
d. Sun – light from the
sun supports all the
life on Earth as we
know it. Also
considered
inexhaustible. (at
least for the next 5
billion years)
e. Water – constantly
renewed/replenished
by the water cycle.
However, fresh water
resources are
somewhat limited.
The use and quality of
water must be
carefully monitored to
ensure future use.
Renewable and nonrenewable resources notes
f. Biomass fuels – are
organic matter
(wood, plants,
animal residues,
etc…) that contain
stored solar energy.
Used to supply energy
to 15% of the
world’s supply.
g. Geothermal energy
– the heat
generated deep
within the Earth.
Fueled by the
decay of
radioactive
elements. Used to
heat water.
Renewable and nonrenewable resources notes
Renewable and nonrenewable resources notes
3. Nonrenewable Resources
Any resource that cannot be replaced
during the time of a human life span.
Took millions of years to form and exist
in fixed amounts in the Earth.
They need to be conserved before they
become depleted.
a. Ores – mineral
deposits from
which valuable
metals and
nonmetals can be
recovered for profit.
Metallic ores include:
gold, silver, copper,
aluminum, zinc,
etc…
Nonmetallic ores
include: salt, sand,
gravel, clay,
diamonds,
gemstones, etc..
Currently there are no
metal mines in
operation in PA.
The major nonmetallic
ores mined are coal,
limestone, granite,
slate, sand, and
gravel.
Renewable and nonrenewable resources notes
b. Fossil Fuels
Are nonrenewable because they take
millions of years to form.
In developing countries, the fossil fuels
are fossilized wood, charcoal, and peat.
In developed countries, the fossil fuels
are mainly coal, natural gas, and oil.
i. Coal – the remains
of wetland plants
that have been
compressed over
millions of years.
Different types –
Peat – about 50%
carbon. The rest is
water and
contaminants.
Lignite (brown coal)
– about 70% carbon.
Bituminous (soft
coal) – about 85%
carbon.
Anthracite (hard
coal) – greatly than
90% carbon. This is
the cleanest burning
and least abundant.
PEAT
LIGNITE
BITMUNOUS
ANTHRACITE
Most of the coal fields in Western PA
are bituminous coal whereas the coal
fields in Eastern PA are anthracite.
Russia produces about 50% of the
world’s supply of coal. China produces
about 20%. The U.S. produces about
15% of the world’s supply.
ii. Petroleum and
Natural Gas – are
the remains of
mainly marine
organisms.
Typically found in
underground
formations called
traps with the
natural gas trapped
on top and oil on the
bottom.
Currently, PA does
not produce
significant amounts
of oil and gas but
the beginning of the
U.S. oil boom in the
1800’s started in
Titusville, PA.
Renewable and nonrenewable resources notes
Renewable and nonrenewable resources notes
4. Global Energy Use and
Production.
Energy
consumption
increased by 50%
from 1973-1993.
Expected to
continue to
increase in the
future mainly in
developing or
third world
countries.
Renewable and nonrenewable resources notes
Remember that using more fossil fuels
accelerates the global warming trend
due to more greenhouse emissions and
pollution.
What other effects will a growth in
global energy use produce?
5. Alternative Energy
Resources.
a. These are energy resources that are
more renewable or more
environmentally friendly in comparison
to fossil fuels.
b. Currently include the following: solar,
wind, geothermal, hydropower,
nuclear, and biomass.
i. Solar energy – can
be used to heat
buildings and
water and provide
electricity.
Passive solar
heating uses large
south facing
windows to collect
the sun’s energy.
Solar cells can
collect and convert
the sun’s energy
into electricity for
residential use.
ii. Wind – turns giant
wind turbines that
produce electricity.
Currently, there are
about two dozen
wind turbines in PA.
Several are located
in Somerset, PA
near the turnpike.
iii. Hydropower – the
energy of water
stored behind dams
can be turned into
electricity.
Currently, there are
23 dams in PA that
produce electricity.
iv. Nuclear Power – uses the process of fission
to release energy to make electricity.
Produces about 20% of the electricity in the
U.S.
Currently, PA has five nuclear power plants.
(Beaver Valley, Susquehanna, Three Mile
Island, Limerick and Peach Bottom)
In 1979, there was a partial reactor
meltdown at Three Mile Island. This
brought a halt to nuclear development in
the U.S. There have been no new plants
since.
Three Mile Island
v. Trash – burning trash to produce electricity.
Currently, PA has seven waste-to-energy plants that
burn close to 19 million tons of waste a year.
Availability of Resources
Environment and Ecology
Standards 4.2.B
Almost every resource needs to be
removed from the Earth and
processed in some way before it can
be used.
What ultimately determines the
availability of resources are the costs
involved in removing/extracting it from
the Earth and the costs involved in
processing/refining them into
products.
1. Removing/Extracting
Earth’s Resources –
Over time, technology
has increased the
efficiency of obtaining
our natural resources.
A. Farming practices
– changed from many
human/animal labor
to increased use of
farm machinery.

More Related Content

PPTX
Water Resources.pptx
PPT
Groundwater Management
PDF
Impact of Climate Change on Groundwater Resources
PPTX
MINERAL RESOURCES
 
PPTX
Artificial recharge of groundwater
PDF
River basins in India
PPTX
Ground water pollution in India
DOCX
Global circulation patterns of atmosphere
Water Resources.pptx
Groundwater Management
Impact of Climate Change on Groundwater Resources
MINERAL RESOURCES
 
Artificial recharge of groundwater
River basins in India
Ground water pollution in India
Global circulation patterns of atmosphere

What's hot (20)

PPTX
Environmental Audit
PPTX
Sludge Volume Index (SVI)
PPTX
Impact of climate change on groundwater
PPTX
Mineral resources
PDF
Water resources.
PDF
Impacts of urbanisation on groundwater
PPT
Ground water sampling & Analysis technique
PPTX
Classification, Characterization & Identification of Hazardous Waste
PPTX
Mineral Resources
DOCX
Research Proposal-Assessment of the Potential Impacts of Humans to Groundwate...
PPTX
Notes revolution rotation
PPTX
Water resources
PPTX
Ocean atmosphere interactions
PPTX
EIA report presentation
PPTX
Tips for soil and water sampling
PPTX
Interlinking of rivers in india
PDF
National ambient air quality standards 2009.pdf
PPTX
The moon
PDF
Ground water contamination
PPTX
Ground water
Environmental Audit
Sludge Volume Index (SVI)
Impact of climate change on groundwater
Mineral resources
Water resources.
Impacts of urbanisation on groundwater
Ground water sampling & Analysis technique
Classification, Characterization & Identification of Hazardous Waste
Mineral Resources
Research Proposal-Assessment of the Potential Impacts of Humans to Groundwate...
Notes revolution rotation
Water resources
Ocean atmosphere interactions
EIA report presentation
Tips for soil and water sampling
Interlinking of rivers in india
National ambient air quality standards 2009.pdf
The moon
Ground water contamination
Ground water
Ad

Viewers also liked (16)

PPT
Resources [renewable and non renewable]
PPTX
Resources
PPT
Renewable and non renewable
PPT
Chapter 2 Notes Resources
PPT
Renewable And Nonrenewable Resources
PPTX
Natural resources renewable and non renewable
PPTX
Sources of energy
PPT
Natural resources
PPTX
Natural resources
PPT
Renewable and Nonrenewable Energy Resources
PPT
Renewable & Nonrenewable Resources
PPTX
Natural Resources Presentation
PPTX
Natural Resources
PPTX
renewable and non renewable resources
PPTX
Fosiles y sus clasificaciones
PPT
Natural resources final ppt
Resources [renewable and non renewable]
Resources
Renewable and non renewable
Chapter 2 Notes Resources
Renewable And Nonrenewable Resources
Natural resources renewable and non renewable
Sources of energy
Natural resources
Natural resources
Renewable and Nonrenewable Energy Resources
Renewable & Nonrenewable Resources
Natural Resources Presentation
Natural Resources
renewable and non renewable resources
Fosiles y sus clasificaciones
Natural resources final ppt
Ad

Similar to Renewable and nonrenewable resources notes (20)

PPT
PPTX
Energy resources
PPT
Chapter 5 follows
PPT
Chapter 5
PPTX
Natural resources.ppt
PPT
Natural rresources conservation by Muhammad Fahad Ansari12IEEM14
PPT
GEOG101 Chapt05 lecture
PPT
GEOG101 Chapter 5 Lecture
PPTX
Classification of natural resources (pdf)
PPT
Module 2 - natural resources finalll.ppt
DOCX
Non renewal energy resources
PPT
Managing Earth's Resources
PPT
Earth's Natural Resources
PPT
Lecture 9 energy_sources
PDF
U1 chap1
PPT
Natural resources lecture
PPT
sources of energy.
DOCX
Renewable and non
PPT
Sources of energy.
PPTX
Classification of ENERGY RESOURCES .pptx
Energy resources
Chapter 5 follows
Chapter 5
Natural resources.ppt
Natural rresources conservation by Muhammad Fahad Ansari12IEEM14
GEOG101 Chapt05 lecture
GEOG101 Chapter 5 Lecture
Classification of natural resources (pdf)
Module 2 - natural resources finalll.ppt
Non renewal energy resources
Managing Earth's Resources
Earth's Natural Resources
Lecture 9 energy_sources
U1 chap1
Natural resources lecture
sources of energy.
Renewable and non
Sources of energy.
Classification of ENERGY RESOURCES .pptx

Recently uploaded (20)

DOCX
573137875-Attendance-Management-System-original
PDF
Artificial Superintelligence (ASI) Alliance Vision Paper.pdf
PDF
Mohammad Mahdi Farshadian CV - Prospective PhD Student 2026
PDF
PPT on Performance Review to get promotions
PPT
introduction to datamining and warehousing
PPTX
Fundamentals of Mechanical Engineering.pptx
PDF
Well-logging-methods_new................
PPTX
Current and future trends in Computer Vision.pptx
PDF
Mitigating Risks through Effective Management for Enhancing Organizational Pe...
PPTX
UNIT 4 Total Quality Management .pptx
PPTX
Sustainable Sites - Green Building Construction
DOCX
ASol_English-Language-Literature-Set-1-27-02-2023-converted.docx
PPTX
M Tech Sem 1 Civil Engineering Environmental Sciences.pptx
PPTX
Artificial Intelligence
PPT
Total quality management ppt for engineering students
PDF
Automation-in-Manufacturing-Chapter-Introduction.pdf
PPTX
Safety Seminar civil to be ensured for safe working.
PDF
Unit I ESSENTIAL OF DIGITAL MARKETING.pdf
PDF
The CXO Playbook 2025 – Future-Ready Strategies for C-Suite Leaders Cerebrai...
PDF
Level 2 – IBM Data and AI Fundamentals (1)_v1.1.PDF
573137875-Attendance-Management-System-original
Artificial Superintelligence (ASI) Alliance Vision Paper.pdf
Mohammad Mahdi Farshadian CV - Prospective PhD Student 2026
PPT on Performance Review to get promotions
introduction to datamining and warehousing
Fundamentals of Mechanical Engineering.pptx
Well-logging-methods_new................
Current and future trends in Computer Vision.pptx
Mitigating Risks through Effective Management for Enhancing Organizational Pe...
UNIT 4 Total Quality Management .pptx
Sustainable Sites - Green Building Construction
ASol_English-Language-Literature-Set-1-27-02-2023-converted.docx
M Tech Sem 1 Civil Engineering Environmental Sciences.pptx
Artificial Intelligence
Total quality management ppt for engineering students
Automation-in-Manufacturing-Chapter-Introduction.pdf
Safety Seminar civil to be ensured for safe working.
Unit I ESSENTIAL OF DIGITAL MARKETING.pdf
The CXO Playbook 2025 – Future-Ready Strategies for C-Suite Leaders Cerebrai...
Level 2 – IBM Data and AI Fundamentals (1)_v1.1.PDF

Renewable and nonrenewable resources notes

  • 1. Renewable and Nonrenewable Resources Environment and Ecology Standards 4.2 – A
  • 2. 1. Natural Resources All of the Earth’s organisms, air, water, and soil, as well as materials such as oil, coal, and ore that are removed from the ground. Separated into two broad categories:  Renewable resources  Nonrenewable resources
  • 3. 2. Renewable Resources Are any resource that cycles or can be replaced within a human life span. Examples include: water, crops, wind, soil, sunlight, animals, etc…
  • 4. a. Food and fiber – are renewable agricultural resources that can be harvested or raised indefinitely… … unless their use exceeds the rate they can be replaced. b. Soil – a mixture of living organisms and dirt. Even though it initially takes thousands of years to form, the rate at which soil can regenerate depends on the climate of an area.
  • 6. c. Wind – caused by the uneven heating of the Earth. Not only renewable but inexhaustible. d. Sun – light from the sun supports all the life on Earth as we know it. Also considered inexhaustible. (at least for the next 5 billion years) e. Water – constantly renewed/replenished by the water cycle. However, fresh water resources are somewhat limited. The use and quality of water must be carefully monitored to ensure future use.
  • 8. f. Biomass fuels – are organic matter (wood, plants, animal residues, etc…) that contain stored solar energy. Used to supply energy to 15% of the world’s supply. g. Geothermal energy – the heat generated deep within the Earth. Fueled by the decay of radioactive elements. Used to heat water.
  • 11. 3. Nonrenewable Resources Any resource that cannot be replaced during the time of a human life span. Took millions of years to form and exist in fixed amounts in the Earth. They need to be conserved before they become depleted.
  • 12. a. Ores – mineral deposits from which valuable metals and nonmetals can be recovered for profit. Metallic ores include: gold, silver, copper, aluminum, zinc, etc… Nonmetallic ores include: salt, sand, gravel, clay, diamonds, gemstones, etc.. Currently there are no metal mines in operation in PA. The major nonmetallic ores mined are coal, limestone, granite, slate, sand, and gravel.
  • 14. b. Fossil Fuels Are nonrenewable because they take millions of years to form. In developing countries, the fossil fuels are fossilized wood, charcoal, and peat. In developed countries, the fossil fuels are mainly coal, natural gas, and oil.
  • 15. i. Coal – the remains of wetland plants that have been compressed over millions of years. Different types – Peat – about 50% carbon. The rest is water and contaminants. Lignite (brown coal) – about 70% carbon. Bituminous (soft coal) – about 85% carbon. Anthracite (hard coal) – greatly than 90% carbon. This is the cleanest burning and least abundant.
  • 17. Most of the coal fields in Western PA are bituminous coal whereas the coal fields in Eastern PA are anthracite. Russia produces about 50% of the world’s supply of coal. China produces about 20%. The U.S. produces about 15% of the world’s supply.
  • 18. ii. Petroleum and Natural Gas – are the remains of mainly marine organisms. Typically found in underground formations called traps with the natural gas trapped on top and oil on the bottom. Currently, PA does not produce significant amounts of oil and gas but the beginning of the U.S. oil boom in the 1800’s started in Titusville, PA.
  • 21. 4. Global Energy Use and Production. Energy consumption increased by 50% from 1973-1993. Expected to continue to increase in the future mainly in developing or third world countries.
  • 23. Remember that using more fossil fuels accelerates the global warming trend due to more greenhouse emissions and pollution. What other effects will a growth in global energy use produce?
  • 24. 5. Alternative Energy Resources. a. These are energy resources that are more renewable or more environmentally friendly in comparison to fossil fuels. b. Currently include the following: solar, wind, geothermal, hydropower, nuclear, and biomass.
  • 25. i. Solar energy – can be used to heat buildings and water and provide electricity. Passive solar heating uses large south facing windows to collect the sun’s energy.
  • 26. Solar cells can collect and convert the sun’s energy into electricity for residential use.
  • 27. ii. Wind – turns giant wind turbines that produce electricity. Currently, there are about two dozen wind turbines in PA. Several are located in Somerset, PA near the turnpike.
  • 28. iii. Hydropower – the energy of water stored behind dams can be turned into electricity. Currently, there are 23 dams in PA that produce electricity.
  • 29. iv. Nuclear Power – uses the process of fission to release energy to make electricity. Produces about 20% of the electricity in the U.S. Currently, PA has five nuclear power plants. (Beaver Valley, Susquehanna, Three Mile Island, Limerick and Peach Bottom) In 1979, there was a partial reactor meltdown at Three Mile Island. This brought a halt to nuclear development in the U.S. There have been no new plants since.
  • 31. v. Trash – burning trash to produce electricity. Currently, PA has seven waste-to-energy plants that burn close to 19 million tons of waste a year.
  • 32. Availability of Resources Environment and Ecology Standards 4.2.B
  • 33. Almost every resource needs to be removed from the Earth and processed in some way before it can be used. What ultimately determines the availability of resources are the costs involved in removing/extracting it from the Earth and the costs involved in processing/refining them into products.
  • 34. 1. Removing/Extracting Earth’s Resources – Over time, technology has increased the efficiency of obtaining our natural resources. A. Farming practices – changed from many human/animal labor to increased use of farm machinery.