Earth & Environmental Sciences
Demystifying Emerging Trends in Green Technology
Emerging Trends in Computation Intelligence and Disruptive Technologies: Volume 3
Demystifying Emerging Trends in Green Technology explores the transformative intersection of computational intelligence disruptive technologies and green innovations. This volume offers insights into diverse fields such as blockchain IoT artificial intelligence machine learning and sustainable development. Each chapter presents cutting-edge research and practical solutions addressing environmental sustainability energy efficiency and eco-friendly technologies.
With contributions from leading researchers this book discusses advancements like blockchain-based security green marketing smart waste management sustainable agriculture and innovative healthcare solutions. It emphasizes the role of interdisciplinary approaches in driving a greener and smarter future.
Key Features:
- Integration of AI IoT and blockchain in sustainable systems
- Applications in healthcare agriculture energy and environmental science
- Practical and innovative solutions for real-world challenges
- Insights into future trends in green technology and disruptive innovation
Soil Biology & Ecology: The Basics
Soil Biology & Ecology: The Basics offers an accessible introduction to the diverse and dynamic world beneath our feet. This book explores soil as a thriving habitat detailing the rich biodiversity of microorganisms and macroorganisms that sustain essential ecological cycles. It covers the key biochemical cycles in soil including carbon nitrogen phosphorus and sulfur explaining how these processes contribute to soil fertility and ecosystem health. With a focus on ecological relationships like symbiosis and competition this guide illuminates the vital role of soil in supporting life and agricultural productivity.
Ideal for students researchers and nature enthusiasts the book is a foundational resource for understanding soil's impact on the biosphere and human food production.
Key Features:
- Comprehensive overview of soil as a living ecosystem
- Detailed coverage of soil microbiota macrobiota and biochemical cycles
- Insights into ecological relationships and their practical applications
Nanomaterials: An Approach Towards Environmental Remediation
This book explains various methods needed to overcome the challenges faced during environmental remediation with a focus on nanotechnology. The book comprises ten edited chapters that aim to inform and educate readers about recent technologies that are beneficial for pollution control.
Starting with an introduction to environmental remediation the book covers innovative nanomaterials including spinel nanoferrites carbonaceous quantum dots carbon nanotubes and nanobioadsorbents. In addition to highlighting the environmental benefits of these materials the book includes chapters on the potential of nanotechnology for harnessing the environment to generate energy through nanogenerators and piezoelectric energy harvesting devices.
Key features of the book include notes on fundamental issues and challenges regarding environmental remediation easy to read content with pictorial illustrations and scholarly references for each chapter. The book is an informative resource for students and academicians in science technology and environmental science discipline.
A Crisis like No Other: Understanding and Defeating Global Warming
A Crisis Like No Other: Understanding and Defeating Global Warming couples engaging and creative storytelling with accurate details to explain global warming.
It covers both the technical and human issues of global warming by addressing what's causing global warming and why people don't believe it exists. The book tells readers how to convince others that global warming is not only real but life-threatening and offers a clearly laid out path to solve it. The book is accurate and carefully researched drawing on the author's thirty years of studying the science of global warming and the human psyche that surrounds it. The author breaks down the subject into four parts which can be thought of as four mini-books in one. The first part covers the psychology of global warming denial how to defend ourselves against its lies and fake news and how to convince others of global warming's grave harm. The second part describes exactly what global warming is. The third answers the question what makes us so sure? Finally the last part provides a road map showing us how to defeat global warming.
This book is comprehensive fast-paced and easily accessible to readers from all walks of life. It provides an overview of everything one needs to know about global warming and as such is an excellent survey of global warming topics. In addition to being an easy and enjoyable read for the general public A Crisis Like No Other: Understanding and Defeating Global Warming serves as a handy primer on climate change for environmental science classes.
A Primer on Earth Pollution: Pollution Types and Disposal
A Primer on Earth Pollution: Pollution Types and Disposal is an encyclopedia of important research articles and short essays on pollution. Chapters in the initial half provide information about a wide variety of pollutants (dyes and microplastics) and contributing factors (thermal pollution and the impact of GM plants for instance). Each chapter explains the nature of polluting agents and presents notes and references on preventive measures. Notes on the associated clinical complications due to exposure are also proved where applicable such as the case of MDR bacteria in marine environments. The latter chapters of the book cover the biotechnology of medical waste disposal using microbes as well as nanotechnology used for limiting the spread of COVID-19.
The volume is a handy reference for students and trainees in the field of environmental science as it brings a balance of basic and applied information on the subject of pollution.
250 Years of Industrial Consumption and Transformation of Nature: Impacts on Global Ecosystems and Life
Anthropogenic changes in the environment caused by 250 years of economic growth and utilization of fuel and mineral resources have considerably impacted the natural environment. The resulting physical and chemical alterations to the Earth's sphere and our adaptive responses in the biosphere are detailed in this reference book. Readers will learn about concepts relevant to Earth’s history the evolution of life economy ecology environmental history biology and medicine and how these concepts can be linked to environmental change. The scope of this interdisciplinary work entails to convey the true degree of responsibility for the universal consequences of ecosystem degradation resulting from industrial processing human consumption and the transformation of natural sites due to industrialization and urbanization.
Topics covered in the book include:
-Ecosystem transformations by natural and anthropogenic forces
-The Anthropocene epoch
-A short history of industrialization
-Environmental sites and the impact of socio-economic influences
-The current environmental crisis
This textbook is intended for graduate students in economics civil engineering architecture agronomics forestry technical and mining sciences political sciences business studies and humanities. General readers who wish to understand the basic philosophy behind environmental studies and their relation to human activity can also benefit from this book.
Hermann's Cave (Germany) - A Late Pleistocene Cave Bear Den
Famous Planet Earth Caves presents information about geologically important caves or rock shelters in different kinds of rock formations all over the world. Each volume of this series is a focused monograph on a single cave. The series covers many disciplines that can be applied to study a cave: geology (cave genesis sedimentology speleothems) hydrogeology (speleothems for climate reconstructions aquifer reconstructions) paleontology (cave bear or carnivore dens) archaeology (Palaeolithic to Medieval camp or burial sites) and modern biology. Each volume is beautifully illustrated and written in a simple manner that will be of interest to general readers speleologists and natural scientists alike.
This volume gives details of Hermann’s Cave in Rübeland near Wernigerode Germany. It is one of the largest show caves in Germany and Europe. The cave gives us information about the region in the Ice Age dating back to 350.000 years (which implies its significance in the Late Pleistocene epoch). The cave is within a beautiful granite (Brocken Peak) and limestone rock and valley cut landscape. The volume presents information about the Late Pleistocene fauna discovered within the cave and other archaeological findings. Specifically the volume gives details about the small and large cave bear species within the cave their ecological relationship to the region (including interactions with steppe lions and Cromagnon humans) and their survival in taiga forest mountain areas of central Europe. This volume continues the premise of the book series on bringing information about fossils and archaeological records of well-known caves to light and will give readers an interesting peek into Hermann’s Cave by bringing some of its Ice Age stories to life.
The Role of Organic Petrology in the Exploration of Conventional and Unconventional Hydrocarbon Systems
Organic petrology is a discipline of geology which integrates multidisciplinary approaches for the exploration and evaluation of fossil fuel resources by conventional and unconventional procedures. Organic petrology has brought forth new powerful analytical tools for the characterization of geological hydrocarbon systems thus providing information where previous analytical techniques prove to be less effective.
The reference provides a broad comprehensive source of information about the application of organic petrology in the investigation of geological formations related with the production and accumulation of oil and gas. Eleven chapters cover a variety of topics (kerogens dispersed organic matter systems sedimentary organic matter systems oil and gas shales etc.). Additional information in chapters referring to examples in specific geographical locations provides a global perspective of hydrocarbon exploration. The book is an introductory reference for all scholars involved in applied organic petrology of hydrocarbon systems including graduate and undergraduate geology students engineers and lab technicians.
[Series intro]
Geology: Current and Future Developments is a book series that brings together the latest contributions to geological research. Each volume features chapters contributed by academic scholars / professional experts from around the world. The scope of the book series includes (but is not limited to) topics such as plate tectonics climate science hydrocarbon exploration mineral exploration and environmental science. This series is intended as a useful compendium of scholarly reference material for geology students and professionals.
Sophie's Cave (Germany) - A Late Pleistocene Cave Bear Den
Famous Planet Earth Caves - The new series presents important caves or rock shelters in any kind of rock types all over the world. Each book focuses on a single cave presentation covering different and most important disciplines of a cave: Geology (e.g. cave genesis sedimentology speleothems) such as Hydrogeology (e.g. speleothems for climate reconstructions aquifer reconstructions) Paleontology (e.g. cave bear or carnivore dens) Archeology (e.g. Palaeolithic to Medieval camp or burial sites) and modern Biology (e.g. bat caves). The books are scientific chaptered monographs sometimes of show caves but often of non- or difficult to access caves. The well-illustrated books are written in a mixed scientific and popular scientific way for a better understanding and larger readership especially speleologists and natural scientists all over the world.
Towards a Unified Soil Mechanics Theory: The Use of Effective Stresses in Unsaturated Soils
With the application of the effective stress concept the strength and volumetric behavior of saturated materials was clearly understood. For the case of unsaturated materials a universally accepted effective stresses equation is still under debate. However the use of the effective stress concept to develop constitutive models for unsaturated soils is becoming increasingly popular not only because the hydro-mechanical coupling observed in these materials is implicit in the formulation but also because simpler and more precise models can be established. Towards A Unified Soil Mechanics Theory demonstrates that the same strength and volume change equations used in saturated soil mechanics can be used for the case of unsaturated soils. In other words the constitutive models developed for saturated soils can be used for unsaturated materials once the effective stress equation has been defined.
In this book an analytical equation for the effective stress for unsaturated soils is established. This equation requires the knowledge of the superficial area of solids affected by the capillary phenomenon. In other words we need to know how water distributes in the pores of the soil. This distribution can be modeled using a solid-porous model built on a regular network. However the size of the network required to correctly simulate the structure of a small soil sample cannot be managed with a common PC. For that reason a probabilistic porous-solid model is developed. This model uses the pore size distribution in the form of a probabilistic function which in addition to the Laplace equation and the principle of continuity can be expressed as the probability of a pore of certain size to be filled or dry at suction during a wetting or drying path respectively. In this way the soil-water retention curves can be simulated and the effective stress at any suction during wetting or drying processes can be determined. Based on this approach it is shown that unsaturated soils behave under the same principles for strength and volumetric behavior as saturated soils.
Towards A Unified Soil Mechanics Theory paves the way for a universal theory of soil mechanics. The volume will be a valuable reference to civil engineers earth scientists and hydrologists interested in soil mechanics at both academic and professional levels.
The Impacts of Skiing and Related Winter Recreational Activities on Mountain Environments
This e-book reviews environmental impacts of ski tourism in mountain environments. Specifically the book addresses skiing impacts on soils vegetation vertebrate and invertebrate animals living in such habitats. Additional chapters also explain the methods for the restoration of disturbed sites at high altitude and snow cover in a changing climate.
The e-book is therefore a compilation on the latest knowledge on environmental impacts of skiing and is intended to be a standard reference for ecologists students and universities business professionals (ski-resort managers) regional governmental organizations conservation agencies and non-governmental organizations (NGOs).
Separating Pro-Environment Technologies for Waste Treatment, Soil and Sediments Remediation
The removal of contaminants and pollutants from natural or valuable materials is a critical issue in environmental management and conservation. Fundamentally the procedure consists of measures employed to separate what is good (recyclable materials soil and sediments) from what is bad (non recyclable materials contaminants).
A perspective of current technologies developed for mineral processing is of great assistance for finding appropriate solutions for different environmental situations. The liberation and separation processes adopted to recover valuable minerals from a gangue are in principle the same processes that can be applied to waste materials for recovering useful materials and to soil and sediments to reduce contamination.
Separating Pro-Environment Technologies for Waste Treatment Soil and Sediments Remediation investigates how technologies for separation that take origin form mineral processing have improved and evolved when applied to waste treatment and soil and sediment remediation.
Application of Adsorbents for Water Pollution Control
Among various water and wastewater treatment technologies the adsorption process is considered better because of lower cost simple design and easy operation. Activated carbon (a universal adsorbent) is generally used for the removal of diverse types of pollutants from water and wastewater. Research is now being directed towards the modification of carbon surfaces to enhance its adsorption potential towards specific pollutants. However widespread use of commercial activated carbon is sometimes restricted especially in developing or poor countries due to its higher costs. Attempts are therefore being made to develop inexpensive adsorbents utilizing abundant natural materials agricultural and industrial waste materials. Use of waste materials as low-cost adsorbents is attractive due to their contribution in the reduction of costs for waste disposal therefore contributing to environmental protection. This e-book explores knowledge on recent developments in adsorbents synthesis and their use in water pollution control. This handy reference work is intended for researchers and scientists actively engaged in the study of adsorption and the development and application of efficient adsorption technology for water treatment. This e-book covers a wide range of topics including modeling aspects of adsorption process and the applications of conventional and non-conventional adsorbents in water remediation emphasizing sorption mechanisms of different pollutants on the adsorbents.
Sustainability: Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives
The concept of sustainability is inherently multi-disciplinary because it concerns a complex system having economic technological ecological political and other perspectives. Consequently any effort in the area of sustainability involves concepts principles and methods from engineering the social sciences including economics and social psychology the biological sciences including ecology and the physical sciences. Sustainability: Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives discusses multidisciplinary aspects of the salient concepts principles and methods relevant to sustainability in a coherent and comprehensive manner. Topics covered range from green engineering and sustainability metrics to infrastructure and environmental policy.
Handbook of Natural Zeolites
Handbook of Natural Zeolites provides a comprehensive and updated summary of all important aspects of natural zeolites science and technology. The e-book contains four sections covering the relevant scientific background established technologies recent discoveries and future perspectives. All 28 chapters in this handbook are presented by highly respected scientists and leaders in natural zeolites science and include extensive references. The text in this e-book is supported by excellent figures and tables. As a result novices and established scientists alike will find this comprehensive volume a great resource for years to come.
Populations, Biocommunities, Ecosystems: A Review of Controversies in Ecological Thinking
Discussions on historical and philosophical issues in ecology have been rather limited. This volume presents an enriched and comprehensive review on ecological issues. The topics covered in this e-book include the emergence of the field of life-history strategies in population ecology the model building tradition in community ecology the holism/reductionism debate the ecosystemic and systemic approach as well as a discussion of the emergence development and dominance of the biodiversity concept. By bringing together diverse ideas points of view and theoretical traditions often treated separately the book allows the development of ecology as a whole discipline to emerge. This introductory book is intended to stimulate discussion among both beginners and professionals in the field of history and/or philosophy of science as well as ecologists. The topics covered are also central to the concerns of scholars engaged in environmental studies environmental ethics and policy-making.
The Role of Place Identity in the Perception, Understanding, and Design of Built Environments
In an era of globalization where the progressive deterioration of local values is a dominating characteristic identity is seen as a fundamental need that encompasses all aspects of human life. One of these identities relates to place and the physical environment. Place identity is concerned with a set of ideas about place and identity from the perspective of a wide range of disciplines. Mainly it refers to the meaning and importance of places for their inhabitants and users.
Readers of this e-book will gain an insight on the role of identity as a basis for the perception experience and appreciation of the form of built structures. This e-book explains knowledge in relation to place identity focusing on people's identity and those factors that play a significant role in this process. Most of all the book gives further insight about place identity with regard to global and local contexts and across multifaceted and multicultural societies. The theme is approached from a number of disciplines that include environmental psychology philosophy urban sociology geography urban planning urban design architecture and landscape architecture.
Environmental Issues for the Twenty-First Century and their Impact on Human Health
The close of the first decade of the 21st century posed additional pressing environmental issues related to human activities and their effects on the planet. The need to protect the planet seems frequently to be in conflict with the need to feed the earth’s inhabitants and to supply the energy required for industry transportation regulating our indoor environment and fueling other needs. The corporate world sometimes seems to have a callous disregard for the safety of its workers and the public at large. This e-book discusses the ecological and health impacts of aquaculture the Alberta tar sands development the Gulf Oil disaster of 2010 the hazards of inadequately safeguarding water supplies and global warming to name some of the important topics. This e-book will be very useful to students of environmental science ecology ecotoxicology and others interested in a broad overview of contemporary environmental issues. It is presented in a highly readable manner that makes it accessible to well-informed members of the public. Complex biochemical and chemical equations are avoided. Nonetheless current primary sources of scientific information are used and referenced making it easy for a reader to pursue a topic in greater depth if so desired.
Groundwater Reactive Transport Models
Ground water reactive transport models are useful to assess and quantify contaminant precipitation absorption and migration in subsurface media. Many ground water reactive transport models available today are characterized by varying complexities strengths and weaknesses. Selecting accurate efficient models can be a challenging task. This ebook addresses the needs issues and challenges relevant to selecting a ground water reactive transport model to evaluate natural attenuation and alternative remediation schemes. It should serve as a handy guide for water resource managers seeking to achieve economically feasible results.
Mechanisms of Landscape Rehabilitation and Sustainability
Mechanisms of Landscape Rehabilitation and Sustainability is based on the results of landscape rehabilitation with the help of fabricated soil and a new approach on the use of restored soils for building houses and communities.
This book presents discoveries and proposals that have emerged from the authors' research and explains ways to protect Earth's ecosystems against further degradation. These proposals are founded on the philosophy of sustainable development and its application to various aspects essential to the long-term success of human beings; these include community coexistence education water purification and recycling agriculture the production of fabricated soil for landscape rehabilitation and the preservation and propagation of wild flora. Strategies for both indoor and outdoor systems are covered in this publication.
The book covers several subjects including molecular biology botany microbiology soil biochemistry and human interaction with the ecosystem. Methods for soil rehabilitation ultimately allow us to obtain optimal crop yield.
Mechanisms of Landscape Rehabilitation and Sustainability is of particular interest to academic and professional biologists soil scientists ecologists agronomists and architects.