3553Class14PreClassP PSlides

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Slide1: 

“The One Second Plumber clears drains instantly! The secret is the special mixture of gases, not compressed air that expands rapidly when contacting water, powering through most stubborn clogs including food, grease and hair. The One Second Plumber is easy to use. Use on sinks, tubs, showers, floor drains and garbage disposals. Attach the extension handle for use on toilets. Environmentally friendly, contains no lye, acid or harsh chemicals.” (http://www.asseenontv.com/prod-pages/1secondplumber.html)

Slide2: 

“Imagine a toilet that doesn't require water, a septic tank or a trip to the outhouse behind the shed at 3:00 in the morning. Convenient, clean and easy to install, the Multoa line of waterless composting toilets make the cottage as comfortable as living in the city.” (http://www.greenhomewellness.com/) The Multoa 40 Waterless Composting Toilet

Slide3: 

“As a country, we're also realising that we waste a lot of energy. Waste that produces huge quantities of greenhouse gas. We're not only blowing a lot of greenhouse gasses, we're also blowing a lot of money! Advanced evacuated tube solar systems such as Endless Solar, and heat pump solar hot water systems like Quantum save the average local family some $300 a year, and save 3-4 tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions.” () http://www.enviro-friendly.com/default.shtml

Slide4: 

“An Italian cement company has developed a treatment for building materials that transforms pollutants into less harmful substances, such as water and carbon dioxide.  Experts suggest that covering 15 percent of a smog-choked industrial city like Milan could reduce pollution by 50 percent.” (http://www.truthdig.com/eartotheground/item/20061111_pollution_eating_cement/)

Slide5: 

“Canada's Secret Natural Gas Crisis 2007-02-05 By Keith Kohl Baltimore, MD-Peak gas will become a major problem over the next decade. Canada's natural gas industry is in jeopardy. And with the U.S. being so dependent on Canadian gas, this puts our economy at risk from the resulting shortfalls. The North American natural gas market hinges on Canada, which exports half its gas production to the United States. In turn, the U.S. supplies Mexico with over 17% of its demand. And Canadian gas exports have grown immensely. According to the Canadian Gas Association, they increased over 306% in the last twenty years. So any slowdown in Canadian gas production would greatly affect its southern neighbors.” (http://wealthdaily.com/print.php?id=294&pub=wd)

Slide6: 

www.wildwalnut.com

Slide7: 

Organic Expo Sydney 2006 (www.organicangels.com )

Slide8: 

www.practicalenvironmentalist.com

Slide9: 

California Enacts Safe Cosmetics Act Californians frustrated with what they consider the FDA's loose control over cosmetic safety have taken matters into their own hands with the country's first state cosmetics regulatory act, which takes effect in January 2007. The California Safe Cosmetics Act of 2005 will require manufacturers to report the use of potentially hazardous ingredients to the state Department of Health Services (DHS), which in turn will alert consumers. The DHS has the authority to investigate whether the product could be toxic under normal use and to require that manufacturers submit health effects data. Manufacturers that continue marketing products deemed unsafe in California could face legal action. (www.ehponline.org/docs )

Slide10: 

http://www.theozonehole.com/ozclim.gif

Slide11: 

Environment-Related Social Sciences Environmental management Environmental economics Ecological economics Environmental Law Environmental administration and planning Municipal ecology Social or Human Ecology Settlement Ecology Environmental Political Science Environmental sociology Environmental journalism Environmental psychology Ecological Psychology Environmental Ethics Environmental philosophy Environmental history Environmental education From: http://www.soziologie.uni-halle.de/huber/docs/environmentalsociology02.pdf

Mold can grow on the human body – the “invironment” as Bell would say…(www.moldmart.net): 

Mold can grow on the human body – the “invironment” as Bell would say…(www.moldmart.net)

Slide13: 

“Tan Honeycomb Mask with Activated Carbon Filter for fragrances, air pollution: great for travel.” (www.icanbreathe.com)

Slide14: 

“Positions Available for First and Second Year Students Jobs are available for first-year and second-year medical students to conduct patient interviews. Hours are flexible and vary with student’s need to study for exams, etc. Increased hours are available during school breaks. The major responsibility is to conduct interviews over the telephone with patients who have lead toxicity, work-related asthma, silicosis or hearing loss. There may also be some review of hospital records. Depending on interest and availability, the students will also go on factory site visits. Pay is $10.50/hour. To apply, please submit a resume to Dr. Kenneth D. Rosenman, Department of Medicine, 117 West Fee Hall.” “www.oem.msu.edu”

Page from Karl Marx’s PhD Thesis…see, anyone can do it!! www.marxists.org : 

Page from Karl Marx’s PhD Thesis…see, anyone can do it!! www.marxists.org

Slide23: 

"This particular quilt is from an Ecofeminism class and is called "Earth Quilt I". Each of the students did a block which describes what they would want to say about earth issues. The quilt was designed to honor individuals and groups who have been known for their work on earth issues.“ (www.natureshift.org )

Slide26: 

tracking our own souls: Men in nature and the nature of Men Robert Bly, Martín Prechtel, Haki Madhubuti, Miguel Rivera, Doug Von Koss, Willem De Thouars

Slide27: 

The Force of Nature Humbles All Men by Howard Terpning 

The sixteen participants of ìSurvivorî moments before arriving to the Island www.nyu.edu/classes/keefer/nature : 

The sixteen participants of ìSurvivorî moments before arriving to the Island www.nyu.edu/classes/keefer/nature

What might an ecofeminist say about this? But, what about Women’s One-A-Day? (www.healthsupplementsite.com): 

What might an ecofeminist say about this? But, what about Women’s One-A-Day? (www.healthsupplementsite.com)

Slide31: 

“The social standing and role of women in this historical period were heavily determined by the influential, powerful male theologians and church leaders. …In this seemingly rationally defined natural order, it followed that the man, as the superior being, was head of the household. The woman fulfilled her primary role in marriage--an institution that gained a measure of respectability under the reforms of Pope Innocent III [left]--through the procreation and nurture of children. … reinforced the traditional negative view of woman as an inferior and seductive being, whose carnal nature caused men to sin.” (gbgm-umc.org/gifs/worldhistory )

www.infoshop.org: 

Students at the Institute for Social Ecology www.infoshop.org

Slide34: 

“With the help of student athletes, members of UConn's EcoHusky student group collected sneakers for recycling this past Earth Day.” (www.emagazine.com )

Slide35: 

www.ristoklint.com/warning-signs-1

(www.cartoonstock.com) : 

(www.cartoonstock.com)

Slide38: 

Ronald Celebrates Victory On GE-Fed Chicken See also... Ronald McDonald Arrested At GE Protest & Ronald Locks Himself To McD's Gates www.scoop.co.nz )

Slide39: 

www.mccullagh.org

Slide40: 

www.mercyforanimals.org

Slide41: 

“The BCEN was established in 1981. We are a provincial network of the Canadian Environmental Network (CEN). ,,, Keeping our ecology vibrant and healthy is a shared responsibility and is essential if our planet is to have a healthy future.”   www.ecobc.org

Rachel Carson: 

www.lib.uwo.ca Rachel Carson

Slide44: 

healewife.typepad.com

Slide45: 

www.ehponline.org

Slide46: 

www.carboncoach.com

Slide47: 

www.sciencedaily.com Bush denies human-induced climate change Genius from the Crawford school of climatology By Chris Williams → More by this author Published Friday 31st March 2006 10:35 GMT Get The Register's new weekly newsletter for senior IT managers delivered to your inbox, click here. George W Bush has indicated he doesn't believe human activity is causing climate change. The President made his latest dismissal of the scientific consensus to an Australian journalist at a Whitehouse press briefing. Question: There's a virtual consensus that the planet is warming...and I suppose I want to know, what is your plan? Bush: We - first of all, there is - the globe is warming. The fundamental debate: is it manmade or natural. Put that aside.

Slide48: 

www.wtv-zone.com

Slide49: 

View Grant Neufeld's map Taken in Calgary, Alberta (See more photos here) 51°2' 30" N, 114°4' 09" W-114.06928 On May 30, 2006, the Calgary Culture-Jammers engaged in some guerrilla gardening. Various vegetables and flowers were planted at a couple sites in downtown Calgary.  “On May 30, 2006, the Calgary Culture-Jammers engaged in some guerrilla gardening. Various vegetables and flowers were planted at a couple sites in downtown Calgary.” (static.flickr.com)

Slide50: 

www.algorerules.com

Slide55: 

www.cnn.com “SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- A butterfly living in a tree isn't unusual, unless it's environmental activist Julia Butterfly perched 180 feet above the floor of an old-growth redwood forest, staging a sit-in to save the woods from lumberjacks. Her staying power is formidable, but real butterflies have better timing.”

Slide56: 

www.productionclips.com/actjuliahanging.jpg

Slide57: 

“2 activists removed from redwood trees Remedy, a tree sitter who has been occupying a redwood for nearly a year, is arrested in the Freshwater Creek drainage. Associated Press photo by Ron Harris” (www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin)

From the Government of Canada Website: …: 

From the Government of Canada Website: …

Slide59: 

Extinct Banff Longnose Dace (Fishes) Benthic Hadley Lake Stickleback (Fishes) Blue Walleye (Fishes) Caribou dawsoni subspecies (Mammals) Deepwater Cisco (Fishes) Eelgrass Limpet (Molluscs) Great Auk (Birds) Labrador Duck (Birds) Lake Ontario Kiyi (Fishes) Limnetic Hadley Lake Stickleback (Fishes) Macoun's Shining Moss (Mosses) Passenger Pigeon (Birds) Sea Mink (Mammals)

Slide60: 

Extirpated Atlantic Salmon (Lake Ontario population) (Fishes) Black-footed Ferret (Mammals) Dwarf Wedgemussel (Molluscs) Frosted Elfin (Arthropods) Gravel Chub (Fishes) Greater Prairie-Chicken (Birds) Greater Sage-Grouse phaios subspecies (Birds) Grey Whale (Atlantic population) (Mammals) Grizzly Bear (Prairie population) (Mammals) Illinois Tick-trefoil (Vascular Plants) Incurved Grizzled Moss (Mosses) Island Marble (Arthropods) Karner Blue (Arthropods) Pacific Gophersnake (Reptiles) Pacific Pond Turtle (Reptiles) Paddlefish (Fishes) Pigmy Short-horned Lizard (Reptiles) Puget Oregonian Snail (Molluscs) Spring Blue-eyed Mary (Vascular Plants) Striped Bass (St. Lawrence Estuary population) (Fishes) Tiger Salamander (Great Lakes population) (Amphibians) Timber Rattlesnake (Reptiles)

Slide61: 

Endangered Acadian Flycatcher (Birds) American Badger jacksoni subspecies (Mammals) American Badger jeffersonii subspecies (Mammals) American Chestnut (Vascular Plants) American Columbo (Vascular Plants) American Ginseng (Vascular Plants) Atlantic Cod (Newfoundland and Labrador population) (Fishes) Atlantic Salmon (Inner Bay of Fundy populations) (Fishes) Atlantic Whitefish (Fishes) Aurora Trout (Fishes) Aweme Borer (Arthropods) Banff Springs Snail (Molluscs) Barn Owl (Eastern population) (Birds) Barrens Willow (Vascular Plants) Bashful Bulrush (Vascular Plants) Bear's-foot Sanicle (Vascular Plants) Bearded Owl-clover (Vascular Plants) Beluga Whale (Eastern Hudson Bay population) (Mammals) Beluga Whale (Ungava Bay population) (Mammals) Benthic Enos Lake Stickleback (Fishes) Benthic Paxton Lake Stickleback (Fishes) Benthic Vananda Creek Stickleback (Fishes) Bird's-foot Violet (Vascular Plants) Blanding's Turtle (Nova Scotia population) (Reptiles) Blue Racer (Reptiles) Blue Whale (Atlantic population) (Mammals) Blue Whale (Pacific population) (Mammals) Blue-grey Taildropper Slug (Molluscs) Bluehearts (Vascular Plants) Blunt-lobed Woodsia (Vascular Plants) Bog Bird’s-foot Trefoil (Vascular Plants) Boreal Felt Lichen (Atlantic population) (Lichens) Branched Phacelia (Vascular Plants) Brook Spike-primrose (Vascular Plants) Burrowing Owl (Birds) Butternut (Vascular Plants) Cherry Birch (Vascular Plants) Coast Microseris (Vascular Plants) Coastal Scouler's Catchfly (Vascular Plants) Coho Salmon (Interior Fraser population) (Fishes) Contorted-pod Evening-primrose (Vascular Plants) Copper Redhorse (Fishes) Cucumber Tree (Vascular Plants) Deltoid Balsamroot (Vascular Plants) Dense Spike-primrose (Vascular Plants) Dense-flowered Lupine (Vascular Plants) Drooping Trillium (Vascular Plants) Dwarf Sandwort (Vascular Plants) Dwarf Woolly-heads (Southern Mountain population) (Vascular Plants) Eastern Mountain Avens (Vascular Plants) Eastern Persius Duskywing (Arthropods) Eastern Prairie Fringed-orchid (Vascular Plants) Eastern Prickly Pear Cactus (Vascular Plants) Engelmann's Quillwort (Vascular Plants) Eskimo Curlew (Birds) False Hop Sedge (Vascular Plants) Five-spotted Bogus Yucca Moth (Arthropods) Forked Three-awned Grass (Vascular Plants) Furbish's Lousewort (Vascular Plants) Gattinger's Agalinis (Vascular Plants) Gold-edged Gem (Arthropods) Golden Paintbrush (Vascular Plants) Grand Coulee Owl-clover (Vascular Plants) Greater Sage-Grouse urophasianus subspecies (Birds) Half-moon Hairstreak (Arthropods) Heart-leaved Plantain (Vascular Plants) Henslow's Sparrow (Birds) Hoary Mountain-mint (Vascular Plants) Horned Lark strigata subspecies (Birds) Horsetail Spike-rush (Vascular Plants) Hotwater Physa (Molluscs) Howell's Triteleia (Vascular Plants) Island Blue (Arthropods) Ivory Gull (Birds) Juniper Sedge (Vascular Plants) Kellogg's Rush (Vascular Plants) Kidneyshell (Molluscs) Killer Whale (Northeast Pacific southern resident population) (Mammals) King Rail (Birds) Kirtland's Warbler (Birds) Lake Erie Watersnake (Reptiles) Lake Sturgeon (Nelson River populations) (Fishes) Lake Sturgeon (Saskatchewan River populations) (Fishes) Lake Sturgeon (Red-Assiniboine Rivers - Lake Winnipeg populations) (Fishes) Lake Sturgeon (Winnipeg River - English River populations) (Fishes) Lake Sturgeon (Western Hudson Bay populations) (Fishes) Lake Winnipeg Physa Snail (Molluscs) Large Whorled Pogonia (Vascular Plants) Leatherback Seaturtle (Reptiles) Limnetic Enos Lake Stickleback (Fishes) Limnetic Paxton Lake Stickleback (Fishes) Limnetic Vananda Creek Stickleback (Fishes) Loggerhead Shrike migrans subspecies (Birds) Long's Braya (Vascular Plants) Mapleleaf Mussel (Saskatchewan - Nelson population) (Molluscs) Margined Streamside Moss (Mosses) Maritime Ringlet (Arthropods) Misty Lake Lentic Stickleback (Fishes) Misty Lake Lotic Stickleback (Fishes) Mormon Metalmark (Southern Mountain population) (Arthropods) Morrison Creek Lamprey (Fishes) Mountain Plover (Birds) Mudpuppy Mussel (Molluscs) Newfoundland Marten (Mammals) Nightsnake (Reptiles) Nodding Pogonia (Vascular Plants) Non-pollinating Yucca Moth (Arthropods) Nooksack Dace (Fishes) North Atlantic Right Whale (Mammals) North Pacific Right Whale (Mammals) Northern Bobwhite (Birds) Northern Bottlenose Whale (Scotian Shelf population) (Mammals) Northern Cricket Frog (Amphibians) Northern Leopard Frog (Southern Mountain population) (Amphibians) Northern Madtom (Fishes) Northern Riffleshell (Molluscs) Nugget Moss (Mosses) Ord's Kangaroo Rat (Mammals) Oregon Forestsnail (Molluscs) Oregon Spotted Frog (Amphibians) Ottoe Skipper (Arthropods) Pacific Water Shrew (Mammals) Peary Caribou (Mammals) Pink Coreopsis (Vascular Plants) Pink Milkwort (Vascular Plants) Pink Sand-verbena (Vascular Plants) Piping Plover circumcinctus subspecies (Birds) Piping Plover melodus subspecies (Birds) Pitcher's Thistle (Vascular Plants) Poor Pocket Moss (Mosses) Porbeagle (Fishes) Prairie Lupine (Vascular Plants) Prairie Skink (Reptiles) Prothonotary Warbler (Birds) Pugnose Shiner (Fishes) Purple Twayblade (Vascular Plants) Rainbow Mussel (Molluscs) Rayed Bean (Molluscs) Red Crossbill percna subspecies (Birds) Red Mulberry (Vascular Plants) Rigid Apple Moss (Mosses) Rocky Mountain Tailed Frog (Amphibians) Roseate Tern (Birds) Rosy Owl-clover (Vascular Plants) Rough Agalinis (Vascular Plants) Round Hickorynut (Molluscs) Round Pigtoe (Molluscs) Rusty Cord-moss (Mosses) Sage Thrasher (Birds) Salish Sucker (Fishes) Sand-verbena Moth (Arthropods) Scarlet Ammannia (Vascular Plants) Seaside Birds-foot Lotus (Vascular Plants) Seaside Centipede Lichen (Lichens) Sei Whale (Pacific population) (Mammals) Sharp-tailed Snake (Reptiles) Short-rayed Alkali Aster (Vascular Plants) Shortnose Cisco (Fishes) Showy Goldenrod (Vascular Plants) Silver Hair Moss (Mosses) Skinner's Agalinis (Vascular Plants) Slender Bush-clover (Vascular Plants) Slender Collomia (Vascular Plants) Small White Lady's-slipper (Vascular Plants) Small Whorled Pogonia (Vascular Plants) Small-flowered Lipocarpha (Vascular Plants) Small-flowered Sand-verbena (Vascular Plants) Small-flowered Tonella (Vascular Plants) Small-mouthed Salamander (Amphibians) Snuffbox (Molluscs) Sockeye Salmon (Sakinaw population) (Fishes) Sockeye Salmon (Cultus population) (Fishes) Southern Maidenhair Fern (Vascular Plants) Spalding's Campion (Vascular Plants) Speckled Dace (Fishes) Spoon-leaved Moss (Mosses) Spotted Owl caurina subspecies (Birds) Spotted Turtle (Reptiles) Spotted Wintergreen (Vascular Plants) Stoloniferous Pussytoes (Vascular Plants) Streambank Lupine (Vascular Plants) Swift Fox (Mammals) Tall Bugbane (Vascular Plants) Tall Woolly-heads (Vascular Plants) Taylor's Checkerspot (Arthropods) Thread-leaved Sundew (Vascular Plants) Tiger Salamander (Southern Mountain population) (Amphibians) Tiny Cryptanthe (Vascular Plants) Toothcup (Vascular Plants) Townsend's Mole (Mammals) Vancouver Island Marmot (Mammals) Vesper Sparrow affinis subspecies (Birds) Virginia Goat's-rue (Vascular Plants) Water-plantain Buttercup (Vascular Plants) Wavy-rayed Lampmussel (Molluscs) Western Painted Turtle (Pacific Coast population) (Reptiles) Western Prairie Fringed-orchid (Vascular Plants) Western Screech-Owl macfarlanei subspecies (Birds) White Flower Moth (Arthropods) White Meconella (Vascular Plants) White Prairie Gentian (Vascular Plants) White Shark (Atlantic population) (Fishes) White Sturgeon (Fishes) White-headed Woodpecker (Birds) Whooping Crane (Birds) Williamson's Sapsucker (Birds) Winter Skate (Southern Gulf population) (Fishes) Wolverine (Eastern population) (Mammals) Wood-poppy (Vascular Plants) Woodland Caribou (Atlantic-Gaspésie population) (Mammals) Yellow-breasted Chat auricollis subspecies (British Columbia population) (Birds) Yucca Moth (Arthropods) 2