NATURAL RESOURCES
Natural
Resources are all that exists without the actions of humankind. This includes
all natural characteristics such as magnetic, gravitational, and electrical
properties and forces. On earth we include sunlight, atmosphere, water, land
(includes all minerals) along with all vegetation and animal life that
naturally subsists upon or within the heretofore identified characteristics and
substances.
Particular
areas such as "The rainforest in Fatu-Hiva" are often characterized
by the biodiversity and geodiversity existent in their ecosystems. Natural
resources may be further classified in different ways. Natural resources are
materials and components (something that can be used) that can be found within
the environment. Every man-made product is composed of natural resources (at
its fundamental level). A natural resource may exist as a separate entity such
as fresh water, and air, as well as a living organism such as a fish, or it may
exist in an alternate form which must be processed to obtain the resource such
as metal ores, mineral oil, and most forms of energy.
There is
much debate worldwide over natural resource allocations, this is partly due to
increasing scarcity (depletion of resources) but also because the exportation
of natural resources is the basis for many economies (particularly for
developed nations).
Some natural
resources such as sunlight and air can be found everywhere, and are known as
ubiquitous resources. However, most resources only occur in small sporadic
areas, and are referred to as localized resources. There are very few resources
that are considered inexhaustible (will not run out in foreseeable future) –
these are solar radiation, geothermal energy, and air (though access to clean
air may not be). The vast majority of resources are exhaustible, which means
they have a finite quantity and can be depleted if managed improperly.
Renewability
is a very popular topic and many natural resources can be categorized as either
renewable or non-renewable:
Renewable resources – Renewable resources can be
replenished naturally. Some of these resources, like sunlight, air, wind, etc.,
are continuously available and their quantity is not noticeably affected by
human consumption. Though many renewable resources do not have such a rapid
recovery rate, these resources are susceptible to depletion by over-use.
Resources from a human use perspective are classified as renewable only so long
as the rate of replenishment/recovery exceeds that of the rate of consumption.
Non-renewable resources – Non-renewable resources either
form slowly or do not naturally form in the environment. Minerals are the most
common resource included in this category. By the human perspective, resources
are non-renewable when their rate of consumption exceeds the rate of
replenishment/recovery; a good example of this are fossil fuels, which are in
this category because their rate of formation is extremely slow (potentially
millions of years), meaning they are considered non-renewable. Some resources
actually naturally deplete in amount without human interference, the most
notable of these being radio-active elements such as uranium, which naturally
decay into heavy metals. Of these, the metallic minerals can be re-used by
recycling them, but coal and petroleum cannot be recycled

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