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Energy Resources

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Coal, petroleum, and natural gas are examples of nonrenewable resources. When these resources are used up, humans will have to find other resources to replace them. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Energy Resources


1
Energy Resources
Preview
Section 1 Natural Resources Section 2 Fossil
Fuels Section 3 Alternative Resources
Concept Mapping
2
Section 1 Natural Resources
Bellringer
Think about these items a plastic sandwich bag,
a pencil, a glass of water, 1 qt of motor oil, an
empty aluminum can, a wooden match, salt, and
some aquarium charcoal. What do these items have
in common? Write your answer in your science
journal.
3
Section 1 Natural Resources
Objectives
  • Describe how humans use natural resources.
  • Compare renewable resources with nonrenewable
    resources.
  • Explain three ways that humans can conserve
    natural resources.

4
Section 1 Natural Resources
Earths Resources
  • A natural resource is any natural material that
    is used by humans, such as water, petroleum,
    minerals, forests and animals.
  • Most resources are changed and made into
    products that make peoples lives more
    comfortable and convenient.
  • The energy we get from many of these resources
    ultimately comes from the suns energy.

5
Section 1 Natural Resources
Renewable Resources
  • A renewable resource is a natural resource that
    can be replaced at the same rate at which it is
    used.
  • Although many resources are renewable, they
    still can be used up before they can be renewed.
  • Trees, for example are renewable. However, some
    forests are being cut down faster than new
    forests can grow to replace them.

6
Section 1 Natural Resources
Nonrenewable Resources
  • Not all of Earths natural resources are
    renewable. A nonrenewable resource is a resource
    that forms at a rate that is much slower than the
    rate at which it is consumed.
  • Coal, petroleum, and natural gas are examples of
    nonrenewable resources. When these resources are
    used up, humans will have to find other resources
    to replace them.

7
Section 1 Natural Resources
Conserving Natural Resources
  • Whether the natural resources you use are
    renewable or nonrenewable, you should be careful
    how you use them.
  • To conserve natural resources, you should try to
    use them only when necessary.

8
Section 1 Natural Resources
Conserving Natural Resources, continued
  • Conserving resources also means taking care of
    the resources even when you are not using them.
  • It is important to keep lakes, rivers, and other
    water resources free of pollution. Polluted water
    can harm plants and animals, including humans.

9
Section 1 Natural Resources
Conserving Natural Resources, continued
  • Energy Conservation The energy we use to heat
    our homes, drive our cars, and run our computers
    comes from natural resources.
  • Most of the natural resources that provide us
    energy are nonrenewable resources. If we dont
    limit our use of energy now, the resources may
    not be available in the future.

10
Section 1 Natural Resources
Conserving Natural Resources, continued
  • Conserving energy is important. You can conserve
    energy by being careful to use only the resources
    that you need.
  • Turn off lights when you are not using them.
    Ride a bike, walk, or take a bus because these
    methods use fewer resources than a car.

11
Section 1 Natural Resources
Conserving Natural Resources, continued
  • Reduce, Reuse, Recycle Another way to conserve
    natural resources is to recycle. Recycling is the
    process of reusing materials from waste or scrap.
  • Recycling reduces the amount of natural
    resources that must be obtained from the Earth.
    Recycling paper reduces the number of trees that
    must be cut down to make new paper products.

12
Section 1 Natural Resources
Conserving Natural Resources, continued
  • Recycling also conserves energy. Energy is
    required to recycle materials, but it takes less
    energy to recycle an aluminum can than it does to
    make a new one.
  • Newspaper, aluminum cans, most plastic
    containers, and some cardboard boxes can be
    recycled. Check with your local recycling center
    to learn more.

13
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Bellringer
What does the term fossil fuels imply about the
source of these fuels?   Write your answer in
your science journal.
14
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Objectives
  • Describe what energy resources are.
  • Identify three different forms of fossil fuels.
  • Explain how fossil fuels form.
  • Describe how fossil fuels are found and
    obtained.
  • Identify four problems with fossil fuels.

15
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Energy Resources
  • The fuels used to run cars, ships, planes, and
    factories, and to generate electrical energy are
    energy resources. Energy resources are natural
    resources that humans use to generate energy.
  • Most of the energy we use comes from a group of
    natural resources called fossil fuels.

16
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Energy Resources, continued
  • A fossil fuel is a nonrenewable energy resource
    formed from the remains of plants and animals
    that lived long ago. Petroleum, coal, and natural
    gas are examples of fossil fuels.
  • Energy is released from fossil fuels when they
    are burned. But because fossil fuels are a
    nonrenewable resource, once they are burned, they
    are gone.

17
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Types of Fossil Fuels
  • All living things are made up of the element
    carbon. Since fossil fuels are formed from the
    remains of plants and animals, all fossil fuels
    are made of carbon, too.
  • Most of the carbon in fossil fuels exists as
    hydrogen-carbon compounds called hydrocarbons.
  • Different fossil fuels have different forms.
    Fossil fuels may exist as liquids, gases, or
    solids.

18
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Types of Fossil Fuels, continued
  • Liquid Fossil Fuels Petroleum A liquid mixture
    of complex hydrocarbon compounds is called
    petroleum. Petroleum is also commonly known as
    crude oil.
  • Petroleum is separated into several kinds of
    products in refineries. Those products include
    gasoline, jet fuel, kerosene, diesel fuel, and
    fuel oil.

19
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Types of Fossil Fuels, continued
  • More than 40 of the worlds energy comes from
    petroleum products. Petroleum products are the
    main fuel for forms of transportation, such as
    airplanes, trains, boats, and ships.
  • Crude oil is so valuable that it is sometimes
    called black gold.

20
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Types of Fossil Fuels, continued
  • Gaseous Fossil Fuels Natural Gas A gaseous
    mixture of hydrocarbons is called natural gas.
    Most natural gas is used for heating, but it is
    also used for generating electrical energy.
  • An advantage of natural gas is that using it
    causes less air pollution than using oil does.
    However, natural gas is very flammable. Gas leaks
    can lead to fires or deadly explosions.

21
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Types of Fossil Fuels, continued
  • Methane, CH4, is the main component of natural
    gas. But other components, such as butane and
    propane, can be separated from natural gas, too.
  • Butane and propane are often used as fuel for
    camp stoves and outdoor grills.

22
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Types of Fossil Fuels, continued
  • Solid Fossil Fuels Coal The solid fossil fuel
    that humans use most is coal. Coal is a fossil
    fuel that is formed underground from partially
    decomposed plant material.
  • Coal was once the major source of energy in the
    United States. People burned coal in stoves to
    heat their homes. Man trains in the 1800s and
    1900s were powered by coal-burning steam
    locomotives.

23
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
How Do Fossil Fuels Form?
  • Petroleum and Natural Gas Formation All types
    of fossil fuels form from the buried remains of
    ancient organisms. Petroleum and natural gas form
    mainly from the remains of microscopic sea
    organisms.
  • When these organisms dies, the remains settle on
    the ocean floor where the remains decay and are
    buried to become part of the ocean sediment. Over
    time, the sediment slowly becomes rock, trapping
    the decayed remains.

24
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
How Do Fossil Fuels Form?, continued
  • Through physical and chemical changes over
    millions of years, the remains become petroleum
    and gas.
  • Gradually, more rocks form above the rocks that
    contain the fossil fuels. Under the pressure of
    over-laying rocks and sediments, the fossil fuels
    can move through permeable rocks.

25
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
How Do Fossil Fuels Form?, continued
  • Permeable rocks are rocks that allow fluids,
    such as petroleum and gas, to move through them.
  • These permeable rocks become reservoirs that
    hold petroleum and natural gas, as shown on the
    next slide.

26
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
27
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
How Do Fossil Fuels Form?, continued
  • Coal Formation Coal forms underground over
    millions of years when pressure and heat cause
    changes in the remains of swamp plants.
  • When plants die, they sink to the bottom of the
    swamp. If they do not decay completely, coal
    formation may begin.

28
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Coal Formation
Click below to watch the Visual Concept.
Visual Concept
29
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Where Are Fossil Fuels Found?
  • Fossil fuels are found in many parts of the
    world. The United States has large reserves of
    petroleum, natural gas, and coal.

30
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Where Are Fossil Fuels Found?, continued
  • Despite its large reserves of petroleum, the
    United States imports petroleum as well.
  • About one-half of the petroleum used by the
    United States is imported form the Middle East,
    South America, Africa, Canada, and Mexico.

31
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
How Do We Obtain Fossil Fuels?
  • The kind and location of fuel determine the
    method used to remove the fuel. People remove
    petroleum and natural gas from Earth by drilling
    wells into rock that contains these resources.
  • Oil wells exist on land and in the ocean. For
    offshore drilling, engineers mount drills on
    platforms that are secured to the ocean floor or
    that float on the oceans surface.

32
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
How Do We Obtain Fossil Fuels?, continued
  • People obtain coal either by mining deep beneath
    Earths surface or by surface mining.
  • Surface mining, also known as strip mining, is
    the process by which soil and rock are stripped
    from the Earths surface to expose the underlying
    coal that is to be mined.

33
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Problems with Fossil Fuels
  • Although fossil fuels provide the energy we
    need, the methods of obtaining them and using
    them can have negative effects on the
    environment.
  • When coal is burned without pollution controls,
    sulfur dioxide is released. Sulfur dioxide
    combines with moisture in the air to produce
    sulfuric acid.

34
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Problems with Fossil Fuels, continued
  • Sulfuric acid is one of the acids in acid
    precipitation. Acid precipitation is rain, sleet,
    or snow that has a high concentration of acids,
    often because of the pollution of the atmosphere.
  • Acid precipitation negatively affects wildlife,
    plants, buildings, and other structures.

35
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Problems with Fossil Fuels, continued
  • Coal Mining Surface mining removes soil, which
    some plants need for growth and some animals need
    for shelter. If land is not properly restored
    afterward, surface mining can destroy wildlife
    habitats.
  • Coal mining can also lower water tables and
    pollute water supplies. The potential for
    underground mines to collapse endangers the lives
    of miners.

36
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Problems with Fossil Fuels, continued
  • Petroleum Problems Producing, transporting, and
    using petroleum can cause environmental problems
    and endanger wildlife.
  • In June 2000, an oil carrier sank off the coast
    of South Africa and spilled more than 400 tons of
    oil. The toxic oil coasted thousands of
    blackfooted penguins. The oil hindered the
    penguins from swimming and catching fish for food.

37
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Problems with Fossil Fuels, continued
  • Smog The burning of petroleum products causes
    an environmental problem called smog. Smog is
    photo-chemical haze that forms when sunlight acts
    upon industrial pollutants and burning fuels.
  • Smog is particularly serious in cities such as
    Houston and Los Angeles as a result of millions
    of automobiles that burn gasoline.

38
Section 2 Fossil Fuels
Smog
Click below to watch the Visual Concept.
Visual Concept
39
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Bellringer
Wind power, solar energy, and hydroelectric power
are three sources of alternative energy. Which,
of any, of these alternative energy sources might
work well in your community? Give three reasons
to support your choice. Write your responses in
your science journal.
40
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Objectives
  • Describe alternatives to the use of fossil
    fuels.
  • List the advantages and disadvantages of using
    alternative energy sources.

41
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Alternative Resources
  • Most of our energy needs are met by the use of
    fossil fuels. But the availability of fossil
    fuels is limited, and once thy are used up, new
    supplies wont be available for thousands -- or
    even millions of years.
  • Obtaining and using fossil fuels has
    environmental consequences. To continued to have
    access to energy and to overcome pollution, we
    must find alternative sources of energy.

42
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Splitting the Atom Fission
  • The energy released by a fission or fusion
    reaction is nuclear energy. Fission is a process
    in which the nuclei of radioactive atoms are
    split into two or more smaller nuclei.
  • When fission takes place, a large amount of
    energy is released. This energy can be used to
    generate electrical energy.

43
Section 3 Alternative Resources
44
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Splitting the Atom Fission, continued
  • Pros and Cons of Fission Nuclear power plants
    provide alternative sources of energy that do not
    have the problems that fossil fuels do.
  • However, nuclear power plants produce dangerous
    radioactive wastes, which must be removed from
    the plant and stored until their radioactivity
    decreases to a harmless level. Nuclear wastes can
    remain dangerously radioactive for thousands of
    years.

45
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Splitting the Atom Fission, continued
  • Another problem with nuclear power plants is the
    potential for accidental release of radiation
    into the environment.
  • If a plants cooling system were to stop
    working, the plant would overheat. Then, its
    reactor could melt and a large amount of
    radiation could escape.

46
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Combining Atoms Fusion
  • Another method of getting energy from nuclei is
    fusion. Fusion is the joining of two or more
    nuclei to form a larger nucleus.
  • This process releases a large amount of energy
    and happens naturally in the sun.

47
Section 3 Alternative Resources
48
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Combining Atoms Fusion, continued
  • The main advantage of fusion is that it produces
    few dangerous wastes.
  • The main disadvantage of fusion is that very
    high temperatures are required for the reaction
    to occur. No known material can withstand such
    high temperatures.
  • So far, controlled fusion reactions have been
    limited to laboratory experiments.

49
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Chemical Energy
  • Some vehicles are powered by energy generated by
    fuel cells. Fuel cells power automobiles by
    converting chemical energy into electrical energy
    by reacting hydrogen and oxygen into water.
  • Chemical energy is the energy released when a
    chemical compound reacts to produce new compounds.

50
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Chemical Energy, continued
  • Once advantage of using fuel cells is that they
    do not create pollution -- the only byproduct is
    water. Fuel cells are also more efficient than
    internal combustion engines.
  • The United States has been using fuel cells in
    space travel since the 1960s. One day, fuel-cell
    technology may be used to generate electrical
    energy in buildings, ships, and submarines.

51
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Solar Energy
  • The energy received by the Earth from the sun in
    the form of radiation is solar energy. The Earth
    gets more than enough solar energy to meet all of
    our energy needs, and this is a renewable
    resource.
  • Solar energy can be used directly to heat
    buildings and generate electrical energy.
    However, we do not yet have the technology to
    generate the amount of electrical energy we need
    from solar energy.

52
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Solar Energy, continued
  • Sunlight can be changed into electrical energy
    through the use of solar cells or photovoltaic
    cells. Solar panels are large panels made up of
    many solar cells wired together.
  • Solar panels mounted on the roofs of some homes
    and businesses provide some of the electrical
    energy used in the buildings.

53
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Solar Energy, continued
  • Solar Heating Solar energy is used for direct
    heating through solar collectors. Solar
    collectors are dark-colored boxes that have glass
    or plastic tops.
  • A common use of solar collectors is to heat
    water, as shown in this figure.

54
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Solar Energy, continued
  • Pros and Cons of Solar Energy One of the best
    things about solar energy is that it doesnt
    produce pollution and it is renewable.
  • However, some climates dont have enough sunny
    days to benefit from solar energy.
  • Although solar energy is free, solar cells and
    solar collectors are more expensive to make than
    other energy systems.

55
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Wind Power
  • Energy can be harnessed from wind. Wind power is
    the use of a windmill to drive an electric
    generator.
  • Wind energy is renewable, and it doesnt cause
    any pollution. However, in many areas, the wind
    isnt strong enough or frequent enough to create
    energy on a large scale.

56
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Hydroelectric Energy
  • Electrical energy that is produced by falling
    water is called hydroelectric energy.
  • Falling water turns turbines inside
    hydroelectric dams and generates electrical
    energy for millions of people.

57
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Hydroelectric Energy, continued
  • Pros and Cons of Hydroelectric Energy After the
    dam is built, hydroelectric energy is inexpensive
    and causes little pollution.
  • Hydroelectric energy is renewable because water
    constantly cycles from water sources to the air,
    to the land, and back to the water source.

58
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Hydroelectric Energy, continued
  • Hydroelectric energy is not available
    everywhere. It can be produced only where large
    volumes of falling water can be harnessed.
  • Huge dams must be built on major rivers to
    capture enough water to generate significant
    amounts of electrical energy.

59
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Hydroelectric Energy, continued
  • Building large dams necessary for hydroelectric
    power plants often destroys other resources, such
    as forests and wildlife habitats.
  • Large numbers of fish die each year because
    their migratory paths is disrupted by damns. Dams
    can also decrease water quality and create
    erosion problems.

60
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Power from Plants
  • Plants are similar to solar collectors in that
    both absorb energy from the sun and store it for
    later use.
  • Leaves, wood, and other parts of plants contain
    the store energy. Even the dung of plant-grazing
    animals is high in stored energy.
  • These sources of energy are called biomass.
    Biomass is organic matter that can be a source of
    energy.

61
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Power from Plants, continued
  • Burning Biomass The most common way to release
    biomass energy is to burn it. About half of the
    worlds population burn wood or charcoal to heat
    their homes and cook their food.
  • Scientists estimate that the burning of wood and
    animal dung accounts for approximately 14 of the
    worlds total energy use.

62
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Power from Plants, continued
  • Gasohol Plants that contain sugar or starch can
    be made into alcohol. The alcohol can be burned
    as a fuel, or the alcohol can be mixed with
    gasoline to make a fuel called gasohol.
  • Biomass is a renewable source of energy.
    However, producing biomass requires land that
    could be used for growing food.

63
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Energy from Within Earth
  • Geothermal Energy The energy produced by the
    heat within the Earth is called geothermal
    energy.
  • In some areas, groundwater is heated by magma,
    or melted rock. Often, the heated groundwater
    becomes steam.
  • Geysers are natural vents that discharge this
    steam or water in a column into the air.

64
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Energy from Within Earth, continued
  • The steam and hot water can also escape through
    wells drilled into the rock. From these wells,
    geothermal power plants can harness the energy
    from within Earth by pumping the steam and hot
    water.

65
Section 3 Alternative Resources
Energy from Within Earth, continued
  • The worlds largest geothermal power plant is in
    California and is called The Geysers. It produces
    electrical energy for 1.7 million households.
  • Geothermal energy can also be used to heat
    buildings. Buildings in Iceland are heated from
    the countrys many geothermal sites.

66
Energy Resources
Concept Mapping
Use the terms below to complete the concept map
on the next slide.
biomass coal natural gas nonrenewable natural resources renewable fossil fuels wind energy

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Energy Resources
68
Energy Resources
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