Urban Development Flashcards

1
Q

Urbanization

A
  • shift away from rural based agricultural jobs to non agricultural jobs, a human settlement that has a high population density
  • countries that made the shift from rural to urban have gone through demographic transition
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2
Q

Environmental Advantages of Urbanization

A
  • mass transit - train or subway - is always running annd always available from an environmental standpoint, it lowers the use of fossil fuel per capita
  • good use of space - efficient use of land - usually building up, not out
  • everything you need is close together, limits need for far travel, more biking and walking
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3
Q

Impact of Urbanization on the Local Water Sources

  • How does urbanization affect the upstream area during divergent water projects like dams?
  • How does urbanization affect the downstream area?
A
  • Increase need of water, leads to water divergent projects
    EX: dam - impact organisms that live in that environment
    Upstream - flooding issues, sediment collection behind the dam, decomposition problems
    Downstream - do not receive normal amounts of sediment & nutrients organisms are use to in order to thrive & survive
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4
Q

Saltwater Intrusion in Coastal Aquifers

A
  • separation of saltwater & freshwater based on the differences in density & pressure which keeps the salt water out of the aquifer
  • overuse of freshwater will then allow the salt water to enter the aquifer
  • takes a lot of funds & energy to desalinate water , the best solution is to avoid salt water intrusion in the first place (like reducing pumping rates and consturcting physical barriers)
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5
Q

How does the use of impervious surfaces affect the water cycle through groundwater, run off, and lack of vegetation?

A
  • groundwater sources are not being recharged
  • runoff - follows natural slope of land - water is universal solvent so as it moves it will pick up soil, pollution, & solid waste
  • Lack of vegetation, no water sink, no transpiration, does not moderate your climate (through releasing water vapor in transpiration)
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6
Q

How does urbanization impact the carbon cycle?

A
  • Anthropogenic carbon produced by burning of fossil fuels (industry, cars, anything that uses fossil fuels in that city) will release carbon dioxide which is a greenhouse gas that contributes to climate change & any impurities in that fossil fuel will also end up in the atmosphere
  • Lot of people -> lot of waste, decomposition will produce either carbon dioxide or methane both are greenhouse gases & can contribute to climate change
  • Waste heat produced from the burning of fossil fuels has a tendency to stay locked within the city
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7
Q

What affect does air pollution through urbanization have on the health of people?

A

Air pollution can impact surrounding areas that did not create the air pollution:

  • respiratory system issues
  • increased asthma attacks
  • inflammation
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8
Q

What is urban sprawl? What are its negative impacts? What are some possible benefits?

A

Urban sprawl - urban areas become dense so people have to move to outskirts of urban area & this ring around urban area keeps increasing = suburbs

  • loss of vegetation, more roads, no mass transit, more car use, more fossil fuels use per person, more impermeable surfaces, & resulting runoff
  • Possible Advantage: less population density, decreased spread of infectious disease
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9
Q

How does the implementation of impermeable surfaces induce the heat island effect?

A

impermeable surfaces causes heat island effect - impermeable surfaces have low albedo so they absorb more of the sun’s radiation - lots of roads, asphalt & buildings temperatures are higher day & night

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10
Q

What are some remediation methods for urbanization to reduce the negative environmental impacts, like increased CO2 release, fossil fuel usage, and loss of vegetation?

A
  • more vegetation - reduces impermeable surfaces by making soil more permeable, helps with runoff (increasing albedo - decreases heat island effect, takes in carbon dioxide)
    plan mass transit into suburban areas (decrease fossil fuel usage)
  • permeable pavement usage
  • as cities need repair & expansion utilize urban planning (build up instead of out and use multi-purpose buildings)
  • remediate brownfields (abandoned building location: clean hazardous waste, remove concrete, repurpose land i.e. build a playground and add more vegetation)
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11
Q

What is an aquifer? What is the difference between a confined and unconfined aquifer?

A
  • Aquifer: A permeable layer of rock & sediment that contains groundwater.
  • Unconfined aquifer: An aquifer made of porous rock covered by soil out of which water can easily flow.
  • Confined aquifer: An aquifer surrounded by a layer of impermeable rock or clay that impedes water flow
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12
Q

Watertable

A

The uppermost level at which the water in a given area fully saturates rock rock or soil

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13
Q

Groundwater Recharge

A

A process by which water percolates through the soil & works its way into an aquifer

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14
Q

Spring

A

A natural source of water formed when water from an aquifer percolates up to the ground surface

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15
Q

Artesian well

A

A well created by drilling a hole into a confined aquifer

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16
Q

What is the Ogallala Aquifer? How has its amount of water changed since the early 1900s?

A

The Ogallala aquifer, also called the High Plains aquifer, is the largest in the United States. The aquifer has declined by about 5 m (16 feet) from 1950 to 2015, mostly due to withdrawals for irrigation that have exceeded the aquifer’s rate of recharge.

17
Q

Cone of Depression

A

An area lacking groundwater due to rapid withdrawal by a well

18
Q

Floodplain

A

The land adjacent to a river

19
Q

Impermeable surface

A

Pavement or buildings that do not allow water penetration