About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 252. Chapters: Agriculture and the environment, Electronics and the environment, Energy and the environment, Environment and religion, Fishing and the environment, Food and the environment, Forestry and the environment, Mining and the environment, Nanotechnology and the environment, Painting and the environment, Plastics and the environment, Printing and the environment, Sustainability by sector, Transport and the environment, Water and the environment, Climate change and agriculture, Aquifer, United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification, Evapotranspiration, Forest gardening, Great Lakes Commission, Water table, Food security, Food vs. fuel, Peak water, Constructed wetland, Daylighting, Forest Stewardship Council, Exclusive Economic Zone, Water resources, Hydraulic fracturing, Implications of nanotechnology, Shifting cultivation, Water pollution, Hubbert peak theory, Hotspot Ecosystem Research and Man's Impact On European Seas, Reclaimed water, Awaaz Foundation, Great Pacific Garbage Patch, Paddy field, Riparian zone restoration, Maximum sustainable yield, Old-growth forest, Groundwater, Indian Ocean Garbage Patch, Connecticut River, Sustainable forest management, Peak gas, Food systems, Drainage basin, Fisheries and climate change, Blue Flag beach, Standby power, Urban forest, Sustainable business, Wetland conservation, Marine conservation activism, Urban forestry, Flood Control Act of 1928, Hydrological code, Sustainable Electronics Initiative, Buffer strip, Water distribution on Earth, Colorado River Compact, Land reclamation, Lead-based paint in the United States, WEPP, Certified wood, Great Lakes Protection Fund, Title 47 CFR Part 15, International Water Management Institute, A Rocha, Silviculture, Riparian buffer, E-Cycling, Environmental implications of nanotechnology, Defying Ocean's End, Turtle excluder device, Sa...