The Effects Of Land Pollution?

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No one really pays attention to that one receipt dropped or soda can thrown out of a car window. If every person in the world disgarded one piece of trash in a lifetime, that would be an estimated 7.4 billion pieces of debris floating around with nowhere to go. Most of that litter ends up in the rivers, lakes, oceans and lands all around. One can only imagine how bad that amount doubles, triples and so forth with the passing of time. The waste that ends up in the waters and on the land affects everyone and everything from animal life to recreation on the beach and even business around those areas. Humans are the source of the pollution and refuse build up. “Litter in the world’s oceans comes from many sources, including containers that fall …show more content…

“Several releases of chemicals, oil and other substances to the land. Contaminated sites abound everywhere in major locations of the world. Besides the chemicals released on the contaminated lands, several debris and wastes that constitute dangers are left on the sites” (“Effects of Land Pollution”). Humans produce vast quantities of waste—in factories and offices, in our homes and schools, and in such unlikely places as hospitals. Even the most sophisticated waste processing plants, which use plasma torches (electrically controlled "flames" at temperatures of thousands of degrees) to turn waste into gas, produce solid waste products that have to be disposed of somehow” (“Waste Disposal”). “In addition, there can be catastrophic consequences of land pollution in relation to humans, animals, water and soils. The effects are even worse if the garbage is not separated into organic, reusable and recyclable waste” (“Effects of Land …show more content…

“Smog hanging over cities is the most familiar and obvious form of air pollution. But there are different kinds of pollution—some visible, some invisible—that contribute to global warming. Generally, any substance that people introduce into the atmosphere that has damaging effects on living things and the environment is considered air pollution” (“Air Pollution”). Even though some of these dangers are known to most humans, they still have not changed their behavior. “Huge buildings in cities are still being built. More cars are made and sold every day. Carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, is the main pollutant that is warming Earth. Though living things emit carbon dioxide when they breathe, carbon dioxide is widely considered to be a pollutant when associated with cars, planes, power plants, and other human activities that involve the burning of fossil fuels such as gasoline and natural gas. In the past 150 years, such activities have pumped enough carbon dioxide into the atmosphere to raise its levels higher than they have been for hundreds of thousands of years” (“Air Pollution”). “Even more is along with harming human health, air pollution can cause a variety of environmental effects. One of these are Acid rain is precipitation containing harmful amounts of nitric and sulfuric acids. These acids are formed primarily by nitrogen oxides and sulfur oxides released into the atmosphere when fossil

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