419
Emory
River
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
1966 1976 1986
Year
1996 2006 2009
Coal consumption (million metric tons)Fly ash production Fly ash production (million metric tons)
Coal consumption
Coal consumption and fly ash production in the United
States, 1966 to 2009
Based on data from the U.S. Geological Survey and U.S. Departmentof Energy.
Tennessee Valley Authority
CHAPTER OUTLINE
Energy Consumption 420
Coal 421
s Coal Mining
s Environmental Impacts of Coal
s Making Coal Cleaner
Oil and Natural Gas 423
s Reserves of Oil and Natural Gas
s Environmental Impacts of Oil and Natural Gas
■ Environmental InSight: The Exxon Valdez and
Deepwater Horizon Oil Spills
Nuclear Energy 430
s Conventional Nuclear Fission
s Nuclear Energy and Fossil Fuels
s Safety and Accidents in Nuclear Power Plants
s The Link Between Nuclear Energy and
Nuclear Weapons
s Radioactive Wastes
■ What a Scientist Sees: Yucca Mountain
■ EnviroDiscovery: A Nuclear Waste Nightmare
s Decommissioning Nuclear Power Plants
■ Case Study: The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
CHAPTER PLANNER✓✓
❑ Study the picture and read the opening story.
❑ Scan the Learning Objectives in each section:
p. 420 ❑ p. 421 ❑ p. 423 ❑ p. 430 ❑
❑ Read the text and study all figures and visuals.
Answer any questions.
Analyze key features
❑ Process Diagram, p. 424 ❑ p. 431 ❑ p. 433 ❑
❑ National Geographic Map, pp. 426–427
❑ Environmental InSight, p. 429
❑ What a Scientist Sees, p. 437
❑ EnviroDiscovery, p. 438
❑ Case Study, p. 439
❑ Stop: Answer the Concept Checks before you go on:
p. 420 ❑ p. 423 ❑ p. 430 ❑ p. 438 ❑
End of Chapter
❑ Review the Summary and Key Terms.
❑ Answer What is happening in this picture?
❑ Answer the Critical and Creative Thinking Questions.
Interpreting Data Question
Did the amount of fly ash produced for each ton of
coal consumed remain constant over this time span?