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Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

thick snow

Casstiel says: When I was still in the Philippines, I can only watch snowfall in awe through the big screen or in front of a video clip.

Not  until after I came over the monastery of Christ in the Desert. It was then that I experienced snowfall and walking on snow. The feeling was a mixture of awe and thrill and then later a feeling of numbness of my nose and ears!

Walking and strolling on snow was a different kind of experience indeed.


Monday, May 24, 2010

air pollutants






Ellen Says: My friend Gbex's latest post is indeed an eye opener. I, myself, is using air purifier at home to sanitize our environment inside the house. Air pollution is the introduction of chemicals, particulate matter, or biological materials that cause harm or discomfort to humans or other living organisms, or damages the natural environment into the atmosphere.

The atmosphere is a complex dynamic natural gaseous system that is essential to support life on planet Earth. Stratospheric ozone depletion due to air pollution has long been recognized as a threat to human health as well as to the Earth's ecosystems.

An air pollutant is known as a substance in the air that can cause harm to humans and the environment. Pollutants can be in the form of solid particles, liquid droplets, or gases. In addition, they may be natural or man-made.

Pollutants can be classified as either primary or secondary. Usually, primary pollutants are substances directly emitted from a process, such as ash from a volcanic eruption, the carbon monoxide gas from a motor vehicle exhaust or sulfur dioxide released from factories.

Secondary pollutants are not emitted directly. Rather, they form in the air when primary pollutants react or interact. An important example of a secondary pollutant is ground level ozone — one of the many secondary pollutants that make up photochemical smog.

Note that some pollutants may be both primary and secondary: that is, they are both emitted directly and formed from other primary pollutants.

About 4 percent of deaths in the United States can be attributed to air pollution, according to the Environmental Science Engineering Program at the Harvard School of Public Health.

Major primary pollutants produced by human activity.
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