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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
12 pages in length. With the current global population at 6,079,229,255 and growing every second, people are overpopulating themselves right out of the planet. According to the Germany World Population Fund, a full one-third of all births is the result of incidental or unwanted pregnancies. With a staggering one billion teenagers right at the brink of their reproductive years, this particular period in time has come to be known as the largest 'youthquake' ever as global officials attempt to quell the perpetual – and highly damaging – population growth. The writer discusses the various impacts of human overpopulation, as well as addresses potential solutions.
Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
12 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCworld.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Population Fund, a full one-third of all births is "the result of incidental or unwanted pregnancies" (Anonymous, 2000, p. overpopulation.org/). With a staggering one billion teenagers right at the
brink of their reproductive years, this particular period in time has come to be known as "the largest youthquake ever" (Anonymous, 2000, p. overpopulation.org/) as global officials attempt to quell
the perpetual - and highly damaging - population growth. I. ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT It has been an environmental problem for decades: the continuing
degradation of public lands due to overpopulation. National and state parks are showing signs of intense wear as people traipse along off-the-beaten-track and do not follow the unspoken law
of the land: tread lightly and leave no trace. There is no question that increased tourism has created a synergistic consequence with regard to the amount of land that
is destroyed each and every year in the countrys parks. "Factories, power plants, resorts we can make anywhere. Wilderness, once we have given it up, is beyond our
reconstruction" (Willis, 1995, p. 21). As more and more people continue to trample through national parks such as Yosemite, Yellowstone and the Grand Canyon, there will soon be nothing
left to enjoy. The "heavy toll" (Lloyd, 1998, p. 3) that such overuse is having upon the land has become more and more evident with each passing year, and
there exist grave consequences to wildlife and the landscape if carefully orchestrated and enforced regulations are not implemented in a timely manner. In spite of the fact that such
degradation is comprehensible with the naked eye, the worst offenders continue to plague the countrys national and state parks with their interpretation of acceptable activities. "The result in the
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