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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 7 page research paper/essay that examines the cause and effect relationship of industrialization and air pollution. The problems associated with air pollution in the contemporary era are attributed to human actions. In other words, there is a direct cause-and-effect situation at work wherein human societies engage in industrialization and the myriad side effects of this industrialization results in polluting the air and the environment. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khcaeair.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
becomes active, it can spew forth tremendous qualities of particulate matter, as well as toxic gas. However, nature is capable of handling the pollutants cause by such events so that
the effects are short-termed and generally quite localized. The problems associated with air pollution in the contemporary era are attributed to human actions. In other words, there is a direct
cause-and-effect situation at work wherein human societies engage in industrialization and the myriad side effects of this industrialization results in polluting the air and the environment. (Thesis statement). The following
examination of literature verifies this cause-and-effect relationship. Pollution, in general, was defined in the Tenth Report of the Britains Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution as: The introduction by man
into the environment of substances of energy liable to cause hazard to human health, harm to living resources, and ecological systems, damage to structures or amenity or interference with legitimate
use of the environment (Colls 1). This definition of pollution, by identifying only elements that are man-made as pollutants, does not classify naturally occurring sources of air pollution,
such as volcanoes, as pollution (Colls 1). This is a logical and utilitarian definition of pollution as it recognizes that there is generally nothing that could or should be done
concerning controlling natural sources of pollutants and it is also a definition that recognizes the serious impact that human activity has had on the environment. According to the World Health
Organization (WHO), roughly 500,000 people die prematurely due to exposure to air pollution (Colls 1). A 1988 study performed by the WHO found that the majority of the worlds population
dwelling in urban areas breathe air that is of unacceptable quality (Turco 4). Preventive and remedial measures that have been undertaken by legislation in various countries, also points towards the
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