This pack of LAW 421 Week 3 BUGusa, Inc. Worksheet shows the solutions to the following problems: Use the scenarios in the BUGusa, Inc., link located on the student website to answer the following questions.…
In the Article, Plastics in our Oceans, Alison Pearce Stevens discusses about the problem of plastic in the ocean. According to the article, Plastic is a very big problem. Even worse plastic is difficult to degrade. This leads to the millions of trash and plastic wind up in the ocean every year. The author then reports that, a group of scientist, from Spain, conducted an experiment where at 141 locations they dropped a net and collected little pieces of plastic.…
Likewise, Crook is isolated by his skin color because he is black while the other people on the ranch are white. He has to live by himself in the barn and is not allowed in the bunkhouse with the rest of the other people. He is also not allowed to play cards with the others because of his skin color and also because they think he stinks. He has to go into his room when it gets dark and all he can do is read he can’t do anything else because he doesn't have anyone that lives with him. While everyone else can go into the bunkhouse and talk or play cards. He gets mad when people come into his room because he is not allowed in the bunkhouse so he thinks it is fair if they are not in his room and he also wants his own privacy. In Mice and men…
Oceans are polluted to a great degree due to humans using plastic and not being recycled.…
Garbology: Our Dirty Love Affair with Trash is a non-fictional work written by Edward Humes, in which he demonstrates the effects of waste which human’s have relentlessly produced over the previous decades. In chapter 6, Nerds vs. Nurdles, Humes exhibits the damage that half a century of careless consumption has had on the environment and ecosystems. Our society today has been blind to its surroundings as a product of consumer apathy and does not realize the detrimental effects of our wasting until it is too large a task to resolve. Society neglects to think beyond the extent of the present and the potential consequences and harms materials could bring once we decided that it is no longer beneficial and toss them out. Scientists cannot even begin to predict the approximate amount of plastic nurdles that floats within the ocean. Without any awareness of the amount of trash, it makes the mission of cleaning the ocean impossible. An individual’s never satisfied hunger for the newest technology continually swells the ocean with increasing plastic. Synthetic material is viewed as a necessity for making everyday life easier. Ironically, plastic gradually finds a path back to harm society that appreciates it so greatly. Through bio-magnification, plastic finds a way back to humans through the consumption of seafood; additionally humans ingest chemicals from synthetics which aquatic animals previously consumed. As plastic remains in the oceans it will continually find a path up the food chain, consequently humans will inescapably ingest their own trash through fish and crustaceans which occupy large portions of daily diets. Consumers also avoid the most detrimental aspect of ocean dumping, the result it has on phytoplankton, microscopic organisms that account for virtually 50% of oxygen. By blindly consuming and creating more garbage, civilization is inadvertently suffocating itself. The lacks of concern consumers and producers have for disposal methods are not…
When the single-use plastic shopping bag was introduced to consumers worldwide in the mid 1960s, a time when governments encouraged their economies into extravagant consumerist lifestyles, I doubt the general population considered the consequences these bags would have on our environment. These bags revolutionized commercial industry by providing us with lightweight, water-resistant, flexible bags for a hassle-free shopping experience. We so thoroughly adopted the practice of consumption that by 2004 an estimated 4 to 5 trillion bags were produced globally, with Northern America and Western Europe accounting for more than 80% of the use of this product (Behind the Scenes). Were the plastic bags to end up solely in landfills, they would compare better even than paper bags for their effect on the environment since neither type decomposes well in such a situation. These innocuous seeming bags, however, often times go where they should not. They can be found washed up along coastlines, tangled in tree limbs, clogged inside gutters and water outflows, wrapped around fences, and even caught in the throats of animals mistaking the bags for food. It is documented that over 267 species of animals have been found suffering from entanglement and ingestation of plastic marine debris (Ocean in peril). Every year, tens of thousands of whales, birds, seals, and turtles die from contact with ocean-borne plastic bags. Even if the bag manages to disintegrate somewhat (even though estimates place decay happening over a 1,000 year period) it poses a threat to smaller marine life that accidentally ingest toxic chemicals contained in the plastic particles. While some manufacturers have taken it upon themselves to exert an effort in reducing these environmental hazards, such as introducing bags made of biodegradable material, the “disposable” plastic shopping bag remains as one of the most epic global dilemmas of our generation.…
We have all heard about how we are killing our oceans and how the coral and fish are suffering. We also hear how we have to clean the beaches, use eco-friendly materials and do our part to help, but does anyone ever tell us what is really happening in the oceans or how to help? In the article “11 Billion Pieces of Plastic Are Ridding Corals with Disease”, published in The Atlantic in January of 2018, Ed Yong interviews two microbiologists, Joleah Lamb and Rebecca Vega Thurber, on how plastic is destroying our coral reefs. The plastic cuts off oxygen and light from the coral casing many different kinds of diseases. Thurber gives some solutions how we can help solve this problem. For example, controlling how much plastic is made locally and how we dispose of plastic that is used. Yong makes several points by using…
Are we killing our oceans? This is the proposed question of Dahr Jamail in his article Oceans of pollution. He details several environmental pollution issues facing the waters of the world, from large floating plastic islands to hypoxic zones in which sea life cannot breathe. His thesis is that humanity’s inability to deal with plastic waste is causing harmful problems in the ocean to rise, which could lead to serious negative effects on the planet. He conveys the current scientific consensus and directs it towards an audience that is unaware or ignorant of these issues.…
Mankind is poisoning the planet. Today, enough fossil fuels have been burned and enough forests have been chopped down to increase the highest concentration of carbon dioxide than any point in the past eight hundred millenniums. (528) In the article “The Acid Sea,” Elizabeth Kolbert wrote about how the polluted sea around Castello Aragonese provides us with a glimpse of our future oceans and how it interferes with the chemistry of the ocean. In the article “Our Oceans are Turning into Plastic … are You?,” Susan Casey discusses the negative effects plastic has on the environment. “The Acid Sea” and “Our Oceans are Turning into Plastic … are You?” did an excellent job with providing strong arguments and appeals to inform and persuade the reader that the world is deteriorating and reform is compulsory for the health of the planet.…
Often times, there are debates surrounding controversial environmental issues, such as global warming, deforestation and nuclear power. But then, there is little or no public debate on the impact of plastic bags on the environment. Plastic bags kill tens of thousands of animals every year. In the marine environment plastic bag litter is lethal, killing tens of thousands of birds, whales, seals and turtles every year as they often mistake plastic bags for food such as jellyfish (planetark, 2015). Various experts estimate that up to a million birds and 100,000 marine mammals are killed each year from plastic debris including bags (One Green Planet, 2015). It is estimated that between 500 billion and one trillion plastic bags are used worldwide each year ( One Green Planet, 2015). This means that plastic bags is serious environmental issue. Given this, we as sustainability leaders should start to think of a way to trigger some public debate on this issue. Sustainability is about…
The novel, Salt to The Sea, by Sepetys, uses a unique style of writing by incorporating each characters perspective in every different chapter. This writing technique works to make the story more interesting and allows for suspense to be created which keeps the reader reading.…
Although many people go through extreme hardship during war, they can find things to love that gives them the endurance to pull through. The novel Salt to the Sea by Ruta Sepetys, details the story of a group of refugees that are desperately trying to escape the encroaching Russian army who are brutally pillaging, raping, and massacring everything in their path, by getting to the ship the Wilhelm Gustloff. The Wilhelm Gustloff is attacked by a Russian submarine and sinks and only four out of the group who were on the ship survive, Florian, Joana, the wandering boy, and Halinka, who become a family with Florian and Joana as the parents. The refugees gave each other hope and a willingness to sacrifice themselves, trust one another, and let...…
Last Friday in class, we wrote a CTA about Emily Dickinson’s poem and had an ORB discussion. For the ORB project, our group read Salt to the Sea by Ruta Sepetys. The book is about four characters, who are the refugees from the World War II, and how they interact with each other. To be honest, in class, I did not raise any deep, philosophical question about what I was doing. I simply followed what I was asked to do. However, when I went back home, sitting in front of my green desk, having a document named Daily Dialogue opened in my laptop, I suddenly wondered it is really peculiar and mysterious, but extremely breathtaking for human to write fictional stories based on creative imaginations. Even though it is diverse from case to case, some…
We 're treating the oceans like a trash bin: around 80 percent of marine litter originates on land, and most of that is plastic. Plastic that pollutes our oceans and waterways has severe impacts on our environment and our economy. Seabirds, whales, sea turtles and other marine life are eating marine plastic pollution and dying from choking, intestinal blockage and starvation. Scientists are investigating the long-term impacts of toxic pollutants absorbed, transported, and consumed by fish and other marine life, including the potential effects on human health.…
This book was chosen for review because I was looking for a book that has a history of salt and how it affects us today. Mark Kurlansky, the author of this book, earned a BA in Theater from Butler University in 1970. He has worked as a playwright at Brooklyn College, a commercial fisherman, a dock worker, a paralegal, a cook, and a pastry chef. He worked as a journalist for many companies which are, The International Herald Tribune, The Chicago Tribune, The Miami Herald, and The Philadelphia Inquirer. He had twenty-five books published and received the Pluma Plata award for Salt among many other awards.…