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pollution |
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pollutionHarmful effect on the environment of by-products of human activity, principally industrial and agricultural processes – for example, noise, smoke, car emissions, pesticides, radiation, sewage disposal, household waste, and chemical and radioactive effluents in air, seas, and rivers. Air pollution contributes to the greenhouse effect. Pollution control involves higher production costs for the industries concerned, but failure to implement adequate controls may result in irreversible environmental damage and an increase in the incidence of diseases such as cancer. For example, in agriculture the mismanagement of fertilizers may result in eutrophication, an excessive enrichment of lakes and rivers caused by nitrate pollution; the subsequent rapid growth of algae darkens the water and eventually depletes its oxygen, causing plants and animals to die. Nitrate pollution has also been linked to stomach cancer, although this is unproven. Radioactive pollution results from inadequate nuclear safety.
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We have shown that many environmental contaminant concentrations have been reduced significantly in the last decade (Matson et al. But the recent news about PBDEs, one in a long line of environmental contaminants that have been discovered in human bodies, is yet another indication that we cannot be complacent about protecting our bodies, our children, and the earth they will inherit. The EW-CRDS technique also was shown to provide a significant advance in sensitivity for chemical detection of TCE, which is a major environmental contaminant. |
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