Ch 4 1 Energy and Mineral Resources

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Energy and Mineral

Resources

Chapter 4, Section 1

Renewable and

Nonrenewable Resources

A renewable resource can be replenished over fairly short time spans such as months, years, or decades

Common examples are plants and animals for food, natural fibers for clothing, and trees for lumber and paper

Energy from flowing water, wind, and the sun are also renewable resources

A nonrenewable resource takes millions of years to form and accumulate

When the present supply of nonrenewable resources run out, there won’t be any more

Common examples are coal, oil, natural gas, iron, copper, uranium, and gold

Concept Check

What is the difference between a renewable and a non-renewable resource?

Renewable are replenished within years, while non-renewable take millions of years to accumulate .

Fossil Fuels

Fossil Fuel – general term for any hydrocarbon that may be used for fuel

Fossil fuels include coal, oil, and natural gas

Coal forms when heat and pressure transform plant material over millions of years

Power plants primarily use coal to generate electricity (using 70% of the coal mined)

Burning coal—much of which is high in sulfur— creates air pollution problems

Petroleum (oil) and natural gas form from the remains of plants and animals that were buried in ancient seas

Over millions of years and continual sediment build up, chemical reactions slowly transform some of the organic remains into the liquid and gaseous hydrocarbons we call petroleum and natural gas

U.S. Coal Fields

Oil Trap

Concept Check

What two features must an oil trap have?

Permeable reservoir rock to allow oil and gas to collect and a cap rock that keeps oil and gas from escaping.

Tar Sands and Oil Shale

Some energy experts believe that fuels derived from tar sands and oil shales could become good substitutes for dwindling petroleum supplies

Tar sands are usually mixtures of clay and sand combined with water and varying amounts of a black, thick tar called bitumen

The oil in tar sands is much more resistant to flow and cannot be pumped out easily

Oil shale is a rock that contains a waxy mixture of hydrocarbons called kerogen

Oil shale can be mined and heated to vaporize the kerogen

The kerogen vapor is processed to remove impurities, and then refined

Oil Shale in the Green

River Formation

Formation of Mineral Deposits

Ore – a material from which a useful mineral or minerals can be mined at a profit

Geologists have established that the occurrences of valuable mineral resources are closely related to Earth’s rock cycle

Some of the most important mineral deposits form through igneous processes and from hydrothermal solutions

Igneous processes produce important deposits of metallic minerals (gold, silver, copper, mercury, lead, platinum, and nickel)

Most hydrothermal deposits form from hot, metal-rich fluids that are left during the late stages of movement and cooling of magma

Placer deposits are formed when eroded heavy minerals settle quickly from moving water while less dense particles remain suspended and continue to move

Hydrothermal Solutions

Concept Check

What are mineral resources?

Earth materials that are extracted and processed for either the metals or the elements they contain.

Nonmetallic Mineral Resources

Nonmetallic mineral resources are extracted and processed either for the nonmetallic elements they contain or for their physical and chemical properties

Nonmetallic mineral resources are divided into two broad groups—building materials and industrial materials

Natural aggregate (crushed stone, sand, and gravel), is an important material used in nearly all building construction

Some substances, like limestone, have many uses in both construction and industry (cement, steel, neutralizing acidic soils…)

Most industrial minerals are not nearly as abundant as building materials, requiring considerable processing to extract the desired substance at the proper degree of purity

U.S. per

Capita use of Mineral and

Energy

Resources

Assignment

Read Ch. 4, Sect. 1 (pg. 94-101)

Do Section 4.1 Assessment #1-8 (pg. 101)

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