Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on WORLD POPULATION GROWTH AND THE IMPACT ON FRESH WATER SUPPLY
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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 15 page paper discusses the ecological aspects and impact of the world's overpopulation in regard to its impact on the world's water systems. Examples, statistics, possible solutions offered. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
15 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MBh2opop.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
and the impact on the various ecosystems tied into land mass. However, what seems to have been overlooked over the last fifty years is the impact that the worlds ever
burgeoning population is having on the availability of fresh water. Given that the average human being cannot long survive without fresh water, it seems imperative that the impact on the
fresh water supply be ascertained, curtailed, and rectified before the point of no return is reached. FRESH WATER ACCESS AND WORLDS POPULATIONS Once,
it can be said, the Earth was a great globe teeming with wildlife, rugged mountains, vast bodies of water, and seas of grasslands. However, with the advent of mans dominion
over his environment, many of these resources were bent to the task of serving mankind and in the wake of this usage entire ecosystems that had existed and survived for,
quite possibly, millennium were destroyed, manipulated, or mutated. It can be stated that there are no virgin areas left in the United States and quite frankly one is hard pressed
to find any virgin territories of any size left on the globe. Mankind has affected almost every ecosystem, it can be stated, on the planet. Millions of food chains, carbon
cycle, nitrogen cycle and water cycles have been disrupted or destroyed, and those are just the cycles that are known. It may not be apparent for many years just how
significant this disruption may be to mankind, but preliminary results from other ecosystems, such as water and air, have already borne out the theory that mankind is polluting its only
sustainable source of life. It is becoming apparent that the Earth can only handle so many human occupants, then they will simply begin to die, mostly due to health related
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