
Environmental Pollution and Control.
Title:
Environmental Pollution and Control.
Author:
Peirce, J. Jeffrey.
ISBN:
9780080531113
Personal Author:
Edition:
4th ed.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (409 pages)
Contents:
Front Cover -- Environmental Pollution and Control -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Preface -- Chapter 1. Pollution and Environmental Ethics -- The Roots of Our Environmental Problems -- Ethics -- Environmental Ethics as Public Health -- Environmental Ethics as Conservation and Preservation -- Environmental Ethics as Caring for Nonhuman Nature -- Application and Development of the Environmental Ethic -- Conclusion -- Chapter 2. Environmental Risk Analysis -- Risk -- Assessment of Risk -- Dose-Response Evaluation -- Population Responses -- Exposure and Latency -- Expression of Risk -- Ecosystem Risk Assessment -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 3. Water Pollution -- Sources of Water Pollution -- Elements of Aquatic Ecology -- Biodegradation -- Aerobic and Anaerobic Decomposition -- Effect of Pollution on Streams -- Effect of Pollution on Lakes -- Heavy Metals and Toxic Substances -- Effect of Pollution on Oceans -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Appendix -- Chapter 4. Measurement of Water Quality -- Sampling -- Dissolved Oxygen -- Biochemical Oxygen Demand -- Chemical Oxygen Demand -- Turbidity -- Color and Odor -- pH -- Alkalinity -- Solids -- Nitrogen -- Phosphates -- Bacteriological Measurements -- Viruses -- Heavy Metals -- Trace Toxic Organic Compounds -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 5. Water Supply -- The Hydrologic Cycle and Water Availability -- Groundwater Supplies -- Surface Water Supplies -- Water Transmission -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 6. Water Treatment -- Coagulation and Flocculation -- Settling -- Filtration -- Disinfection -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 7. Collection of Wastewater -- Estimating Wastewater Quantities -- System Layout -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 8. Wastewater Treatment -- Wastewater Characteristics -- Onsite Wastewater Disposal -- Central Wastewater Treatment -- Primary Treatment.
Secondary Treatment -- Tertiary Treatment -- Disinfection -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 9. Sludge Treatment, Utilization, and Disposal -- Sources of Sludge -- Sludge Treatment -- Utilization and Ultimate Disposal -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 10. Nonpoint Source Water Pollution -- The Runoff Process -- Control Techniques Applicable to Nonpoint Source Pollution -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 11. Water Pollution Law and Regulations -- Common Law -- Statutory Law -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 12. Solid Waste -- Quantities and Characteristics of Municipal Solid Waste -- Collection -- Disposal Options -- Litter -- Pollution Prevention -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 13. Solid Waste Disposal -- Disposal of Unprocessed Refuse in Sanitary Landfills -- Volume Reduction Before Disposal -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 14. Reuse, Recycling, and Recovery -- Recycling -- Recovery -- Energy Recovery from the Organic Fraction of MSW -- Composting -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 15. Hazardous Waste -- The Magnitude of the Problem -- Waste Processing and Handling -- Transportation of Hazardous Wastes -- Recovery Alternatives -- Hazardous Waste Management Facilities -- Pollution Prevention -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 16. Radioactive Waste -- Radiation -- Health Effects -- Sources of Radioactive Waste -- Radioactive Waste Management -- Transuranic Waste -- Waste Form Modification -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 17. Solid, Hazardous, and Radioactive Waste Law and Regulations -- Nonhazardous Solid Waste -- Hazardous Waste -- Radioactive Waste -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 18. Air Pollution -- Types and Sources of Gaseous Air Pollutants -- Particulate Matter -- Hazardous Air Pollutants -- Global and Atmospheric Climate Change -- Health Effects -- Effects on Animals -- Effects on Materials.
Effects on Visibility -- Indoor Air Pollution -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 19. Meteorology and Air Pollution -- Basic Meteorology -- Horizontal Dispersion of Pollutants -- Vertical Dispersion of Pollutants -- Atmospheric Dispersion -- Cleansing the Atmosphere -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 20. Measurement of Air Quality -- Measurement of Particulate Matter -- Measurement of Gases -- Reference Methods -- Grab Samples -- Stack Samples -- Smoke and Opacity -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 21. Air Pollution Control -- Source Correction -- Collection of Pollutants -- Cooling -- Treatment -- Control of Gaseous Pollutants -- Control of Moving Sources -- Control of Global Climate Change -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 22. Air Pollution Law and Regulations -- Air Quality and Common Law -- Statutory Law -- Moving Sources -- Tropospheric Ozone -- Acid Rain -- Problems of Implementation -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 23. Noise Pollution and Control -- The Concept of Sound -- Sound Pressure Level, Frequency, and Propagation -- Sound Level -- Measuring Transient Noise -- The Acoustic Environment -- Health Effects of Noise -- Noise Control -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Chapter 24. Environmental Impact and Economic Assessment -- Environmental Impact -- Socioeconomic Impact Assessment -- Conclusion -- Problems -- Appendix A. Conversion Factors -- Appendix B. Elements and Atomic Weights -- Appendix C. Physical Constants -- Glossary and Abbreviations -- Index.
Abstract:
Complex environmental problems are often reduced to an inappropriate level of simplicity. While this book does not seek to present a comprehensive scientific and technical coverage of all aspects of the subject matter, it makes the issues, ideas, and language of environmental engineering accessible and understandable to the nontechnical reader. Improvements introduced in the fourth edition include a complete rewrite of the chapters dealing with risk assessment and ethics, the introduction of new theories of radiation damage, inclusion of environmental disasters like Chernobyl and Bhopal, and general updating of all the content, specifically that on radioactive waste. Since this book was first published in 1972, several generations of students have become environmentally aware and conscious of their responsibilities to the planet earth. Many of these environmental pioneers are now teaching in colleges and universities, and have in their classes students with the same sense of dedication and resolve that they themselves brought to the discipline. In those days, it was sometimes difficult to explain what indeed environmental science or engineering was, and why the development of these fields was so important to the future of the earth and to human civilization. Today there is no question that the human species has the capability of destroying its collective home, and that we have indeed taken major steps toward doing exactly that. And yet, while, a lot has changed in a generation, much has not. We still have air pollution; we still contaminate our water supplies; we still dispose of hazardous materials improperly; we still destroy natural habitats as if no other species mattered. And worst of all, we still continue to populate the earth at an alarming rate. There is still a need for this book, and for the college and university courses that use it
as a text, and perhaps this need is more acute now than it was several decades ago. Although the battle to preserve the environment is still raging, some of the rules have changed. We now must take into account risk to humans, and be able to manipulate concepts of risk management. With increasing population, and fewer alternatives to waste disposal, this problem is intensified. Environmental laws have changed, and will no doubt continue to evolve. Attitudes toward the environment are often couched in what has become known as the environmental ethic. Finally, the environmental movement has become powerful politically, and environmentalism can be made to serve a political agenda. In revising this book, we have attempted to incorporate the evolving nature of environmental sciences and engineering by adding chapters as necessary and eliminating material that is less germane to today's students. We have nevertheless maintained the essential feature of this book -- to package the more important aspects of environmental engineering science and technology in an organized manner and present this mainly technical material to a nonengineering audience. This book has been used as a text in courses which require no prerequisites, although a high school knowledge of chemistry is important. A knowledge of college level algebra is also useful, but calculus is not required for the understanding of the technical and scientific concepts. We do not intend for this book to be scientifically and technically complete. In fact, many complex environmental problems have been simplified to the threshold of pain for many engineers and scientists. Our objective, however, is not to impress nontechnical students with the rigors and complexities of pollution control technology but rather to make some of the language and ideas of environmental engineering and science more
understandable. PAV JJP RFW An introduction to the more important aspects of environmental science and technology.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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