Marine pollution / by Christopher L.J. Frid, and Bryony A. Caswell.
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: New Delhi : Oxford University Press, 2017.Description: xv, 268 p. : ill. ; 25 cmISBN:- 9780198859888
- 628 FRI/M
Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Text Book | Central Library, IIT Bhubaneswar | Central Library, IIT Bhubaneswar | SEOCS | 628 FRI/M (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | TB11653 | |||
Text Book | Central Library, IIT Bhubaneswar | Central Library, IIT Bhubaneswar | SEOCS | 628 FRI/M (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | TB11652 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
As a society, we use more than 100,000 different industrial compounds to promote health and treat disease, to grow food and to access clean water. While technological developments have improved our lives, most of these compounds end up in our oceans where they threaten marine life and human health. The practice of ocean waste disposal has had a long history and was initially believed to have minimal associated costs. However, it is now clear that although we can use the oceans for cheap waste treatment, we do this at the expense of the other key benefits we derive from the sea, notably human food supplies as well as its aesthetic value (including opportunities for recreation and tourism). As a society, we use more than 100,000 different industrial compounds to promote health and treat disease, to grow food and to access clean water. While technological developments have improved our lives, most of these compounds end up in our oceans where they threaten marine life and human health. The practice of ocean waste disposal has had a long history and was initially believed to have minimal associated costs. However, it is now clear that although we can use the oceans for cheap waste treatment, we do this at the expense of the other key benefits we derive from the sea, notably human food supplies as well as its aesthetic value (including opportunities for recreation and tourism).
Many of the pollution problems of previous decades appear to have been ', the ongoing problems and the emerging challenges that we face. These include hormone mimics, the residues from pharmaceuticals, nanometre-sized particles added to new materials, the millimetric plastics added to shampoos and cosmetics, the artificial fibres in the clothes we wear, and the noise and light pollution from our expanding industries and cities. -- Back cover.
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