Visualizing Environmental Science

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
U.S. Raw Nonfuel Mineral Materials Put into Use Annually, 1900–2006

1900

Million metric tons

3600
3200
2800
2400
2000
1600
1200
800
400
0
1910
Year

1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2006

Recessions

World War

Oil crisis

Great Depression

Primary metals
Recycled metals
Industrial minerals
Construction materials

World War

Courtesy of USGS Mineral Resources Program, 2008.

12


Mineral and


Soil Resources


Interpreting Data
Explain the differences in use of various mineral
categories—why do you suppose usage has
increased so much more in some groups than
in others?

COPPER BASIN, TENNESSEE

T


he United States—like countries worldwide—
is growing increasingly more dependent on
nonfuel mineral resources (see graph), but this
dependence can trigger high environmental costs.
Copper Basin, Tennessee, provides an example of
environmental degradation caused by smelting, a
stage of mineral processing that removes impurities
from metals. During the 19th century mining
companies in southeastern Tennessee extracted
copper ore—rock containing copper—from the
ground and dug vast pits to serve as open-air
smelters. They cut down the surrounding trees to
fire the smelters, producing the high temperatures
needed for separating copper from other
substances in the ore. One of these substances,
sulfur, reacted with oxygen in the air to form sulfur
dioxide. The sulfur dioxide entered the atmosphere,
reacted with water vapor there, and became
sulfuric acid that returned to Copper Basin as acid
precipitation.
Ecological ruin took only a few short years (see
larger photograph, taken in 1973). Acid precipitation
killed plants. Without plants to hold the soil in place,
erosion cut gullies in the rolling hills. The forest
animals disappeared along with the plants, their
food and shelter destroyed.
State and federal reclamation efforts were
only marginally successful until the 1970s, when
specialists began using new replanting techniques.
The new plants had a greater survival rate, and as
they became established, their roots held the soil
in place (see inset photo of a reforested section, in
2008). Birds and field mice slowly began to return.
Today, reclamation of Copper Basin continues;
the goal is to have the entire area under plant cover
by the middle of the 21st century. The return of the
original forest ecosystem will take at least a century
or two. Plant scientists and land reclamation
specialists have learned a lot from Copper
Basin, and they will put this knowledge to use in
future reclamation projects around the world.
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