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AP Exam Preparation

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Title: AP Exam Preparation


1
AP Exam Preparation Environmental Quality and
Pollution
  • Dr. Rick Woodward

2
Todays Agenda (Feb 21, 2012)
  • A. Subject AP Readiness (Start reviewing all of
    your notes and my PowerPoints and class agendas
    that are on-line.
  • B. If you are absent, check my website, you are
    responsible for all of the material that you
    missed during your absence.
  • C. In 1998, this was the first year that the AP
    Environmental Science Exam was offered. (Most
    Exams are now Released)
  • -You should be reviewing these.
  • D. You owe me a weekend project.
  • E. I will take away your electronic devices if
    you are using them during my class.

3
Review Books Other Resources
  • Some Good Review Sources
  • 2. Barrons (good book, four practice tests at
    the end)
  • 3. Prentice Hall (More comprehensive)
  • 4. AP Central on-line Resources Teacher Section
    Student Section (1999 2011) -FRQs Multiple
    Choice Questions
  • -Look at scoring guides and study these
    guides.
  • 5. Look at Released Exams
  • 6. Review my amazing comprehensive lectures
    focusing on current developments in environmental
    science.
  • 7. Current Alternative Energy Synopsis to be
    given out this week

4
Review Multiple ChoiceExam Criteria
  • I. Interdependence of Earths Systems (25) 25
    Questions
  • A. Energy
  • B. Cycle of Matter
  • C. Solid Earth
  • D. Atmosphere
  • E. Biosphere
  • II. Human Population Dynamics (10)
  • 10 Questions.
  • Demographic Transition Model in
    Textbook Birthrate, Death rate, Population.
    Know this model!!

5
Review Multiple Choice Exam Criteria
  • III. Renewable Nonrenewable Resources (15) 15
    questions
  • A. Water
  • B. Minerals
  • C. Soils
  • D. Biology Biodiversity
  • E. Energy
  • F. Land

6
Review Multiple Choice Exam Criteria
  • IV. Environmental Quality (20-25)
  • 20 25 questions
  • A. Air, Water Soil Pollution
  • B. Solid Waste
  • C. Human Health
  • V. Global Change Their Consequences
  • (15-20) 15 20 questions
  • A. First Order Effects
  • B. Higher Order Interactions
  • VI. Environment Society (10) 10 questions
  • A. Economic Forces.
  • B. Cultural Aesthetic Considerations
  • C. Environmental Ethics
  • D. Environmental History, Laws, Regulations.
  • E. Issues Options

7
Significance/Weight of Multiple Choice Questions
  • Study in the following sequence
  • 1. I (Interdependence of Earths Systems) 25
    questions
  • 2. IV (Environmental Quality) 20-25 questions
  • 3. V (Global Change Their Consequences) 15
    20 questions
  • 4. II VI Population Dynamics, Environment
    Society 10 questions on each.

8
  • 4 Questions/90 minutes Label all parts of the
    question a, b, c, d.
  • 1. Document based question Read a short
    document and answer questions based on document.
  • Apply your knowledge (Experimental design).
    i.e. Pesticides (Options Education)
    Mediterranean Fruit Flies, we releases sterile
    male fruit flies)
  • Select four people that support or refute
    your position.
  • 2. Analysis of the Data Section Math question
    and analyze it. i.e. BTUs (Show all your units
    every step of the way and show your work), Apply
    your knowledge
  • 3. Synthesis Evaluation (2 questions)
  • (1) How to design an experiment
  • (2) 2001 Indoor Air Pollution Water Quality
  • 4. There will be a math question. Look at all
    previous years of the exam for those math
    questions.
  • There will be an experimental design
    question.
  • 4 points for design and 6 points for
    rationale.

9
Key areas to study for AP Exam
  • 1. Vocabulary 1 (Study vocabulary)
  • 2. Read Case Studies (Know at least 1-2 for
    each category in Environmental Science)
  • 3. Major Events Chernobyl, Exxon, BP Oil
    Spill, etc.
  • 4. Endangered Species Know at least 3-4
    endangered species. Be specific. (Red Panda is
    not endangered vs. the Giant Panda is
    endangered), Asian Elephant African Elephants
    are endangered, all five species of rhinos are
    endangered
  • 5. Protocols Significance Which ones did
    the United States sign at what was the key
    emphasis of each Kyoto-Climate Change, Egypt,
    Montreal cut emission of CFCs (ozone deplete)
  • 6. Population Giants 1 China, 2 India, 3
    U.S.
  • 7. Chinas economy is booming
  • -Concrete Consumption (building dams)

10
Risk, Toxicology, and Human Health
  • From the first time in the history of the world,
    every human being is now subjected to dangerous
    chemicals from the moment of conception until
    death.
  • -Rachel Carson

11
What are the major types of hazards?
  • 1. Cultural hazards such as unsafe working
    conditions, smoking, poor diet, drugs, drinking,
    driving, criminal assault, unsafe sex, and
    poverty.
  • 2. Chemical hazards from harmful chemicals in
    the air, water, soil, and food.
  • 3. Physical hazards such as noise, fire,
    tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes, volcanic
    eruptions, floods, ionizing radiation.
  • 4. Biological hazards from pathogens
    (bacteria, viruses, parasites), pollen and other
    allergens, and animals such as bees and poisonous
    snakes.

12
Terminology
  • A. The study of the adverse effects of
    chemicals on health is called toxicology.
  • B. Toxicity is a measure of how harmful a
    substance is.
  • C. The amount of potentially harmful substance
    that a person has ingested, inhaled, or absorbed
    through the skin is called the dose.
  • D. The amount of the resulting type or the
    amount of damage to ones health is called the
    response.

13
Terminology Continued
  • E. An acute exposure involves a single dose.
  • F. A chronic exposure involves repeated exposures
    for some fraction of a life time.
  • G. An acute effect is an immediate or rapid
    harmful reaction to an exposure it can range
    from dizziness to death.
  • H. A chronic effect is a permanent or
    long-lasting consequence (kidney or liver damage,
    for example) of exposure to a harmful substance.

14
Two factors affecting dose and response are
  • 1 Bioaccumulation Which is an increase in
    the concentration of a chemical in specific
    organs or tissues at a level higher than would
    normally be expected. (i.e. fat soluble toxins
    vs. water soluble)
  • 2. Biomagnification The levels of some toxins
    in the environment can also magnify as they pass
    through food chains and webs.

15
PCBs
  • Are highly toxic chemicals, banned years ago, but
    still found in some resources.
  • Used as coolant fluids.

16
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17
Example DDT (pesticide, banned in most
countries)
  • Bioaccumulation Biomagnification
  • A. DDT is a fat-soluble chemical that can
    bioaccumulate in the fatty tissues of animals.
  • B. In a food chain or food web the accumulated
    concentrations of DDT can be biologically
    magnified in the bodies of animals at each higher
    trophic level.
  • C. Biomagnification Zooplankton, small fish eats
    zooplankton, large fish eats small fish, bird or
    human eats large fish.

18
What is a Poison?
  • A. Legally, a poison is a chemical that has an
    LD50 of 50 milligrams or less per kilogram of
    body weight.
  • B. An LD50 is the median lethal dose, or the
    amount of a chemical received in one dose that
    kills exactly 50 of the animals (usually rats
    and mice) in a test population (usually 60 200
    animals) within a 14-day period.
  • C. LD stands for lethal dose, and the subscript
    refers to the percentage of test organisms for
    which the dose was lethal.

19
How do scientists determine toxicity?
  • 1. Case Reports least valuable (actual dose is
    not known)
  • 2. Laboratory Investigations
  • 3. Epidemiology Studies of populations of
    humans exposed to certain chemicals or diseases.
  • -The study of patterns of disease or
    toxicity to find out why some people get sick and
    others do not.

20
Toxic Chemicals
  • A. Toxic chemicals are generally defined as
    substances that are fatal to over 50 of test
    animals (LD50) at given concentrations.

21
Todays Agenda
  • Thursday (February 23, 2012)
  • Journal Question What does the term lethal dose
    refer to?
  • 1. Lecture Toxicology Continued.
  • (Slide 37)
  • 2. Comprehensive Exam on March 5, 2012.
  • (Study your book questions and all of your
    lecture notes.. That are on-line)

22
Hazardous Chemicals
  • A. Hazardous chemicals cause harm by
  • 1. Being flammable or explosive.
  • 2. Irritating or damaging the skin or lungs
    (strong acidic or alkaline substances such as
    oven cleaners)
  • 3. Interfering with or preventing oxygen uptake
    and distribution (asphyxiants such as carbon
    monoxide and hydrogen sulfide)
  • 4. Inducing allergic reactions of the immune
    system (allergens)

23
What is a mutagen?
  • A. Mutagens are agents, such as chemicals and
    radiation, that cause random mutations, or
    changes in the DNA molecules found in cells.
  • Examples genetic diseases (Downs
    syndrome), Tumors.

24
Radiation
25
What is a teratogen?
  • A. Teratogens are chemicals, radiation, viruses
    that cause birth defects while the human embryo
    is growing and developing pregnancy, especially
    during the first 3 months.
  • B. Chemicals known to cause birth defects are
    thalidomide, steroid hormones, heavy metals such
    as arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury.

26
What is thalidomide?
  • A. In the 1960s thalidomide was widely used as a
    nonprescription sleeping pill in Europe.
  • B. Caused over 10,000 children to be born with
    birth defects ( seal-like limbs with a hand or
    foot but no arm or leg) before the drug was
    pulled of the market by the FDA.

27
What are Carcinogens?
  • A. Carcinogens are chemicals, radiation, or
    viruses that cause or promote the growth of a
    malignant (cancerous) tumor, in which certain
    cells multiply uncontrollably.
  • B. Many cancerous tumors spread by metastasis
    when malignant cells break off from tumors and
    travel in body fluids to other parts of the body.

28
Causes of Cancer
  • A. According to the World Health Organization,
    environmental and lifestyle factors play a key
    role in causing or promoting up to 80 of all
    cancers.
  • B. Major sources of carcinogens are cigarette
    smoke (30-40 of cancers), diet (20-30),
    occupational exposure (5-15) and environmental
    pollutants (1-10)

29
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30
When do cancers appear?
  • A. Typically, 10-40 years may elapse between the
    initial exposure to a carcinogen and the
    appearance of detectable symptoms.
  • (The A, B, Cs.)

31
Why do we know so little about the harmful
effects of chemicals?
  • 1. Under existing laws most chemicals are
    considered innocent until proven guilty.
  • 2. There are not enough funds, personnel,
    facilities, and test animals to provide such
    information for than a small fraction of the many
    chemicals we encounter in our daily lives.

32
Physical Hazards
  • 1. Earthquakes
  • 2. Volcanic Eruptions
  • 3. Ionizing Radiation

33
Biological Hazards
  • A. What is the greatest risk to disease (viruses
    or bacteria)?
  • Answer Poverty

34
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35
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36
Biological Hazards
  • The Worlds Eight Most Deadly Infectious
    Diseases
  • 1. Acute Respiratory Infections (Bacteria,
    Viruses)
  • 2. Diarrheal diseases (Bacteria, Virus,
    Parasites)
  • 3. Tuberculosis (Bacteria)
  • 4. Malaria (Parasitic Protozoa)
  • 5. AIDS (Virus HIV)
  • 6. Measles (Viruses)
  • 7. Hepatitis B (Virus)
  • 8. Tetanus (Bacteria)

37
Risks that people face in the United States that
shorten their average life span
  • 1. Poverty (7-10 years)
  • 2. Born male (7.5 years)
  • 3. Smoking (6 years)
  • 4. Obese (35) (6 years)
  • 5. Unmarried (5 years)
  • 6. Overweight (15) (2 years)
  • 7. Spouse smoking (1 year)
  • 8. Driving (7 months)

38
Groups of four
  • Select group members and the chapter that you
    wish to present.
  • Distribute sections in the chapter appropriately.
  • 10 slides per person, 40 slides minimum per
    group. Be concise!
  • Provide me with a typed outline of your chapter.
  • PowerPoints need to be formatted on a CD or a
    memory stick.
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