Rational Readings on Environmental ConcernsJay H. Lehr Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1992 - 841 pages Rational Readings on Environmental Concerns Edited by Jay H. Lehr Nearly 50 of today's best known scientific, medical, and political minds discuss the full gamut of environmental issues in this provocative volume. They offer a wide range of insights on the state of environmental science today, including many alternative interpretations you won't find in any other media. Leading authorities such as Bruce Ames on carcinogenicity, Bernard Cohen on radioactivity, Fred Singer on global warming, Dixie Lee Ray on nuclear energy, and more than 40 other frequently quoted voices on the environment offer critical thinking about concerns related to wetlands, ozone reduction, radon, forest reduction, acid rain, asbestos, the greenhouse effect and every other popular environmental issue. These contributions emphasize that environmental policies must be based on careful inquiry that is free of passion, and fully reliant on peer reviewed scientific investigation. Throughout they separate facts from fallacies and offer cool-headed scientific approaches, rather than emotional outrage, for dealing with real problems. You'll find out what biotechnology, environmental economics, medicine, nutrition, recycling, and other strategies can really do to correct serious worldwide problems. Plus, here's the real story on the environmental impacts of: Agricultural chemicals Asbestos Biomagnification DDT Dioxin Electromagnetic fields Groundwater contamination Landfills Nuclear energy Radiation. Rational Readings on Environmental Concerns serves as a vital aid to decision making in the environmental arena. It is essential reading for environmental engineers, toxicologists, pathologists, cancer researchers, lawyers, legislators, regulators, and other professionals involved in environmental protection and assessment. It is also the best source of accurate and comprehensive data on environmental science for the media and publicly active citizens promoting environmental protection. |
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Page 793
... wetlands . A recent Army Corps ruling suggests that when owners pull tree stumps from their land , if any chunks of dirt fall from the stumps , that may constitute filling a wetland . As we'll see , expan- sive government wetlands ...
... wetlands . A recent Army Corps ruling suggests that when owners pull tree stumps from their land , if any chunks of dirt fall from the stumps , that may constitute filling a wetland . As we'll see , expan- sive government wetlands ...
Page 794
... wetlands . And the EPA insisted that facultative vegetation - plant life which by definition appears in uplands as often as in wetlands - be included as a wetland - defining parameter . Robert Pierce , a former Corps of Engi- neers ...
... wetlands . And the EPA insisted that facultative vegetation - plant life which by definition appears in uplands as often as in wetlands - be included as a wetland - defining parameter . Robert Pierce , a former Corps of Engi- neers ...
Page 802
... wetlands ; c . explicitly acknowledge that there are wetlands which are difficult to identify due to seasonal dry periods , droughts and other circum- stances ( these areas do not have all three wetland parameters observable at all ...
... wetlands ; c . explicitly acknowledge that there are wetlands which are difficult to identify due to seasonal dry periods , droughts and other circum- stances ( these areas do not have all three wetland parameters observable at all ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Environmentalism and the Assault on Reason Richard F Sanford | 16 |
The Great Acid Rain Flimflam Edward C Krug | 35 |
Copyright | |
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acid rain agencies Agent Orange agricultural alachlor American animals areas asbestos assessment atmosphere atrazine average biomagnification birds carbon carcinogens cell chemicals chrysotile claims climate CO₂ concentrations contain cost deaths diet dioxin disease dosage dose drugs economic energy environment environmental environmentalists estimate evidence example exposure fact federal forests global global warming greenhouse ground water groundwater groups hazards herbicides human increase industry issue Journal lakes land landfill levels living Love Canal lung cancer ment million minerals models mosquito National natural nuclear Nutrition occur organizations ozone percent pesticides Ph.D plants political pollution population growth problem produce programs protect radiation radioactive radon reason regulations regulatory residues responsible result reverse effect risk rodent scientific scientists Sierra Sierra Club Society soil species tion toxic toxicology toxins tumor vitamin warming waste wetlands Wilderness wildlife