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Warm-up

Warm-up. What physical feature is number 12? What physical feature is number 11? What physical feature is number 5? What physical feature is number 11? Where do most people in Canada live? . EQ. What environmental issues does Canada face today? Homework:

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Warm-up

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  1. Warm-up • What physical feature is number 12? • What physical feature is number 11? • What physical feature is number 5? • What physical feature is number 11? • Where do most people in Canada live?

  2. EQ What environmental issues does Canada face today? Homework: Study Island European Geography and Environment must answer at least 10 questions.

  3. Rules

  4. Brain Gym

  5. Environmental Issues in Canada A new Canadian business decides to build its factory in British Columbia. In order to build the factory the company will have to remove forest area from ten acres of land. The company will use the timber from the forest as fuel for their new factory.

  6. Environmental Issues in Canada Decide whether the scenario given is a natural disaster or is an environmental disaster caused by human interaction with the environment. Have groups justify their answers.

  7. Environmental Issues in Canada In Banff National Park, bears make up 5% of the inhabitants. The bears’ main food source is salmon from the rivers. Due to overfishing outside the park, the salmon population has gone down. In the past ten years the number of bears in the park has declined as well. In addition, bears are now roaming camping sites in search of new food sources.

  8. Environmental Issues in Canada On January 17, 1995 the country of Japan experienced a large earthquake. The earthquake spawned a series of tsunamis off the coast of Japan. One of these tsunamis reached the west coast of Canada and destroyed homes and businesses. The amount of total damages exceeded $30 million.

  9. CANADA’s Environmental Issues

  10. CANADA: The Great Lakes

  11. The Great Lakes • The Great Lakes are an important part of the physical and cultural heritage of North America. • Spanning more than 750 miles from one end to the other, these vast inland bodies of water support life and provide water for drinking, transportation, power, recreation and many other uses.

  12. Acid Rain - Problem • The Canadian environment is being altered by many human activities. • The growth of industries and cities has caused air quality to decline, raising concerns about the effects of fossil fuel use and acid rain.

  13. Acid Rain & the Great Lakes • Factories near the Great Lakes have contributed greatly to Canada’s acid rain problem. • When chemicals from the factories join with water in the clouds, they form acid rain.

  14. Acid Rain & The Great Lakes • Pollutants that are transferred from the air into the Lakes are responsible for harming the quality of the water in the Lakes, as well as the health of the plants and animals that call the Great Lakes home.

  15. Great Lake - Ecosystem • If a fish or plant is poisoned by pollution, any animal that eats that fish or plant will be poisoned as well. • If a fish or plant is lost from an ecosystem, all animals that feed on that plant or fish will lose their food supply.

  16. Preventing Pollution - Solution • In 1972, the U.S. and Canada created the first “Great Lakes Quality Agreement” pledging to clean up and protect the Great Lakes ecosystem. • New laws put strict limits on the amounts of chemicals that factories could release into the air, water, and soil.

  17. Preventing Pollution - Solution (con’t) • Today, education programs encourage prevention. • People in industry and farming are using fewer harmful chemicals. • Consumers are also choosing products that are safer for the environment.

  18. Teach-Ok

  19. Canadian Shield • Most of the Canadian Arctic is covered in a sheet of rock called the Canadian Shield. • This region of ancient granite rock is sparsely covered with soil and deeply eroded by glacial action. • It includes all of Labrador, most of Quebec, northern Ontario, Manitoba, Nunavut Territory, and part of the Northwest Territories, with Hudson Bay to the center.

  20. The Canadian Shield

  21. The Canadian Shield • The Canadian Shield contains much of Canada’s mineral wealth, including diamonds. • Mining is the biggest industry in this area. • About 85 percent of the nation’s iron ore comes from mines near the Quebec- Newfoundland border. • The Canadian Shield also has large deposits of gold, silver, zinc, copper, and uranium.

  22. Canadian Shield • Canada’s extensive mineral resources provide valuable exports and also supply domestic industries. • Minerals from the shield help fuel the manufacturing development of southern Ontario and Quebec.

  23. Teach-Ok

  24. Canada’s Timber Resources • With almost half its land covered in forests, Canada is a leading producer of timber products. • These products include lumber, paper, plywood, and wood pulp. • The major timber – producing provinces include British Columbia, Quebec, and Ontario.

  25. Canadian Shield & Timber - Problem • In the past, almost all of Canada’s exports were raw materials such as minerals and timber. • When too many of these raw materials are removed or extracted from the environment, it hurts the environment permanently. • Historical and current over-extraction of minerals and timber has threatened the future of available resources.

  26. Canadian Shield & Timber - Solution • Today, Canada does not export as many raw materials, and it has increased the export of manufactured goods like cars. • Most provinces now have legislation requiring environmental assessments of new projects, such as mines, pulp, and paper mills.

  27. Teach-Ok

  28. Write Today I leaned about______,_______ and ______. The most important thing I learned was ________________ because ____________________.

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