Air
Pollution
By Susan
Stempleski
Ask people to define the term
air pollution
and most of them will mention dirty air or smog,
that harmful mixture of mist,
exhaust
fumes or smoke that is found in big cities all around the
world. But there is much more to air pollution than dirty air. Air pollution
threatens everyone and is responsible for some of the biggest environmental
problems facing the world today: acid
rain, ozone
depletion, and the possibility of global
climate change.
Air pollution has been selected
as the theme for this second chapter of the Environmental Education
volume because it is a major environmental problem that threatens the
health of human beings and other living things all over the world. In
this introductory lesson, students learn about some of the signs of
air pollution and its harmful effects on humans. While discussing the
sources and effects of air pollution, students improve their language
skills by learning and using new vocabulary and concepts associated
with the topic. By examining the effects of air pollution on themselves
and their own community, students can begin to appreciate how important
it is to maintain good air quality.
Air pollution is a huge topic.
A 50-minute lesson, such as the one outlined in the section on Classroom
Applications, provides only a brief overview of some of
the issues that are involved. In this introductory lesson, students
consider what they already know about air pollution: what it is, its
causes, and its effects. If time allows, teachers are advised to combine
or follow up this lesson with some of the materials outlined in the
section on Internet Resources
to create a more extensive teaching unit.

Background Information
What
is Air Pollution?
Air pollution is any visible
or invisible substance found in the air that is not part of the normal
composition of air. Some air pollution is natural and has always been
a part of the earth's history. However, over the past one hundred years
or so, pollution created by humans has become a major environmental
problem.
Why Worry About Air Pollution?
Air pollution affects everyone.
It is a threat to the health of human beings and many other living things
on the planet. Pollutants
in the air produce smog and acid rain. They also cause cancer
and many other serious health problems. They cause ozone depletion
in the upper atmosphere,
and they increase the possibility of global climate change. Most people
are familiar with visible air pollution, like smog, but some of the
most dangerous air pollutants are invisible to the human eye. Since
polluted air can move from region or area to another, it has the possibility
of affecting nearly everyone on earth.
What Causes Air Pollution?
Air pollution is not new.
Natural air pollution has been around for millions of year. Dust
and a variety of gases from forest fires, volcanoes, and decaying material
in rivers, oceans, and other bodies of water continually enter the atmosphere.
Sometimes this natural pollution can have dramatic effects. For example,
scientists believe that natural gas from plant decay
may have been one of the main causes of global climate change in the
past.
Of course, not all air pollution
is produced naturally. The atmosphere contains pollutants produced by
humans, and these man-made pollutants present a far more serious problem
than natural air pollution. Man-made pollutants are not only sometimes
more harmful, but they are usually concentrated over large cities where
large populations of people live and work.
|
MAJOR TYPES OF
AIR POLLUTION
|
|
TYPE
|
SOURCES
|
SIGNS/EFFECTS
|
|
Ozone
|
• motor vehicles
• other machines
|
• eye problems
• lung
problems
• respiratory
problems
|
|
Carbon
Monoxide
|
• motor vehicles
• small engines
• parking garages
• tunnels
• heavy traffic
|
• headaches
• dizziness
• fatigue
• death
• heart damage
|
|
Nitrogen
Oxides
|
• motor vehicles
• power plants burning fossil
fuels
• coal-burning stoves
|
• lung problems
• acid rain
• forest damage
• damaged buildings and statues
• smog
|
|
Particulate
Matter
|
• diesel engines
• power plants
• industries
• dust in the wind
• wood-burning stoves
|
• lung problems
• eye problems
• discolored buildings and
statues
• reduced visibility
|
|
Sulfur
Dioxide
|
• coal-burning power plants and industries
• coal-burning stoves
• refineries
|
• smog
• eye problems
• lung damage
• kills life in lakes and rivers
• acid rain
• damages buildings and statues
|
|
Lead
|
• vehicles using leaded gasoline
• metal refineries
|
• brain damage
• kidney
damage
|
What Can Be Done About Air Pollution?
Little can be done about natural
pollution, but people can do something about the air pollution caused
by humans. More and more people are becoming concerned about the pollutants
that come from human activity, and there are a number of ways they can
take action and get involved. Here are some of them:
• Reduce the amount of time
you spend in cars, and increase the number of people with whom you
share rides.
• Go to work or school by
bicycle, public bus, or train.
• Walk to work or school
if the distance is not too great.
• Use only as much electricity
as you need. This will reduce the amount of air pollution produced
by power plants.
• Have home and car air
conditioners checked for leaks.
• Grow houseplants that
will absorb certain air pollutants and improve indoor air quality.
• Plant a tree to improve
the environment and absorb carbon dioxide.
• Join or organize a program
to check acid rain.
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