Acid rain and transported air pollutants : implications for public policy.

Acid rain and transported air pollutants : implications for public policy.
Title Acid rain and transported air pollutants : implications for public policy. PDF eBook
Author
Publisher DIANE Publishing
Total Pages 326
Release 1984
Genre
ISBN 1428923578

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Acid Rain and Transported Air Pollutants

Acid Rain and Transported Air Pollutants
Title Acid Rain and Transported Air Pollutants PDF eBook
Author United States. Congress. Office of Technology Assessment
Publisher
Total Pages 334
Release 1984
Genre Acid rain
ISBN

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Acid Rain and Transported Air Pollutants

Acid Rain and Transported Air Pollutants
Title Acid Rain and Transported Air Pollutants PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Total Pages 36
Release 1984
Genre Acid precipitation (Meteorology)
ISBN

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Acid Rain and Transported Air Pollutants

Acid Rain and Transported Air Pollutants
Title Acid Rain and Transported Air Pollutants PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Total Pages 323
Release 1984
Genre Acid rain
ISBN

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Acid Rain and Transported Air Pollutants

Acid Rain and Transported Air Pollutants
Title Acid Rain and Transported Air Pollutants PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Total Pages 35
Release 1984
Genre Acid rain
ISBN 9780890590447

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Acid Rain

Acid Rain
Title Acid Rain PDF eBook
Author Carter N. Lane
Publisher Nova Publishers
Total Pages 192
Release 2003
Genre Nature
ISBN 9781590334614

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'Acid rain' is a broad term used to describe several ways that acids fall out of the atmosphere. A more precise term is acid deposition, which has two parts: wet and dry. Wet deposition refers to acidic rain, fog, and snow. As this acidic water flows over and through the ground, it affects a variety of plants and animals. The strength of the effects depends on many factors, including how acidic the water is, the chemistry and buffering capacity of the soils involved, and the types of fish, trees, and other living things that rely on the water. Dry deposition refers to acidic gases and particles. About half of the acidity in the atmosphere falls back to earth through dry deposition. The wind blows these acidic particles and gases onto buildings, cars, homes, and trees. Dry deposited gases and particles can also be washed from trees and other surfaces by rainstorms. When that happens, the runoff water adds those acids to the acid rain, making the combination more acidic than the falling rain alone. Prevailing winds blow the compounds that cause both wet and dry acid deposition across state and national borders, and sometimes over hundreds of miles. This new book combines an excellent background article with over 900 abstracts and book citations. Easy access is provided by title, author, and subject indexes.

Acid Rain Economic Assessment

Acid Rain Economic Assessment
Title Acid Rain Economic Assessment PDF eBook
Author Paulette Mandelbaum
Publisher Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages 279
Release 2013-11-21
Genre Science
ISBN 1461583535

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This volume, Proceedings of the Conference ACID RAIN: Economic Assessment, is meant to present the areas of agreement which economists have established and the uncertainties which they have discovered in their attempts to use the methodology of economics to better understand the nature of the acid rain issue. Scientific articles about acid rain initially appeared in 1972. The public turned its attention to the issue in the mid-1970s. In April 1979, the first acid rain bill was introduced in the Senate, authored by New York's Senator Daniel P. Moynihan. The bill sought to establish a federal research program dedicated to filling the gaps in understanding of the phenomena of long-range transport of air pollutants and their environmental, health and economic impacts. 'The bill was passed into law in 1980. Since then, tens of bills have been proposed to control emissions of S02 and NO , x thought to be the precursors of acid rain. And yet, in contrast with the pattern set by the majority of environmental issues, where legislation followed very quickly on the heels of public anxiety and involvement, by July 1985 not a single federal acid rain control bill had been passed.