Heavy Metals in the Environment: Using Wetlands for Their Removal

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Hardback
$149.95
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ISBN 9781566704014
Cat# L1401
 

Features

  • Focuses on using wetlands to remove lead from the environment
  • Presents the results of international scientific studies
  • Includes well illustrated concepts and a comprehensive discussion of ecological economics
  • Provides numerous appendices that contain additional support documentation
  • Illustrates how to achieve a better fit of economics and the earth's natural cycle
  • Contains 88 tables, 94 figures, 15 photographs and 20 equations
  • Summary

    Much of the convenience of modern life resides in sheet metal, the cowling shield of most machines and appliances. However, the load that this takes off human shoulders has to be carried elsewhere, and the Earth has borne the burden. Many of us woke up to the environmental cost when over a century of industrialization finally surpassed the capacity of nature to assimilate it.
    International in scope, Heavy Metals in the Environment: Using Wetlands for Their Removal discusses wetland functions and heavy metal contamination. It addresses such questions as: Can systems powered by sunlight handle toxins more effectively than systems running on fossil fuel? At what scale and by what means do we define efficiency? These questions resonate increasingly with a number of global challenges.
    As inescapable as climate change, you can no longer avoid airborne toxins, acid rain, and polluted water by moving away from them. When the time comes to rely less on fossil fuel-based technology, how will we clean up the aftermath of toxic misadventures?
    Written by a leader in the growing field of ecological engineering, Heavy Metals in the Environment: Using Wetlands for Their Removal presents scientific studies that illustrate how natural systems use wetlands to adapt to changes in the ecosystem. It focuses primarily on lead, one of the first materials used by developing civilizations and a metal used heavily in the industrial era. The goal: to achieve a better understanding of how natural systems use wetlands to adapt to wastes.

    Table of Contents

    Introduction and Background
    Introduction, Gaia Wetland and Heavy Metals
    Problems and Needs
    Review of Published Studies, Lead and Wetlands
    Biogeochemical Cycle of Lead and the Energy Hierarchy
    Lead in a Cypress-Gum Swamp, Jackson County, Florida
    Ecological Assessment of the Steele City Swamp
    Lead Distribution in Steele City Swamps
    Experiments with Lead and Acid in Wetland Microcosms
    Simulation Model of a Lead-Containing Swamp Ecosystem
    Lead and Wetlands in Poland
    Lead and Zinc Retention in the Biala River Wetland in Poland
    Perspectives on Heavy Metals Manufacturing, and Environment in Poland
    Value and Policy
    Ecological Economics of Natural Wetland Retention of Lead
    Emergy Evaluation of Biala River Wetland and Its Lead Retention
    The Evolution of Environmental Law and the Industrial Lead Cycle
    Summary; Policy for Heavy Metals and Environment
    Appendices
    References

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