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soil & water conservation merit badge presentation
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Soil & Water Conservation Merit Badge
Tell what soil is and how it’s formed Requirement 1a -Soil is the upper layer of earth where plants grow, made of a mixture of organic remains, clay, and rock particles -produced from rocks through the processes of weathering and natural erosion -water, wind, temperature change, gravity, chemical interaction, living organisms and pressure differences all help break down parent material
3 kinds of soil and how they’re different Requirement 1b -sandy soil:consists of small particles of weathered rock; it's the poorest type of soil for growing because it has low nutrients and is poor in holding water; formed by fragmentation of rocks like granite, limestone, and quartz -slit soil:it's smooth and holds water better than sand; easily transported by moving currents and is mainly found by rivers, lakes, and other water bodies -clay soil:doesn't retain water and doesn't drain well; it's sticky when wet, smooth when dried; the heaviest densest type of soil
3 main plant nutrients and how they’re replenished Requirement 1c -nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium -add earthworms to soil; keep adding kitchen waste to it; add fertilizer; crop rotation
Define soil erosion why it's important/how it affects you Requirements 2a/2b -a natural process that occurs when soil is washed away by running water, blown away by wind, or removed by human activities -it's essential to the formation of new soil -Beaches erode when the sand lost can't keep up with the sand added through natural processes -it gets hard and compact, so it lessens the ability of soil to hold water -it contaminates bodies of water with sediment that can harm plant and animal life
3 kinds of soil erosion Requirement 2c -wind erosion: damages land and natural vegetation by removing soil from one place and depositing it in another -geological erosion: consists of natural elements gradually wearing away rock formations to create soil -accelerated erosion: is most often caused by human activities; is depleted more quickly than it is created
Soil erosion drawings/pictures examples Requirement 2d
Conservation practices/erosion control practices Requirements 3a/3b -any specific action to care for natural resources so they're protected from damage and improved for certain uses 3 kinds of soil erosion control practices: -stream bank protection:protected from erosion by using plants, rocks, or structural measures -cover cropping:growing temporary crops of plants to cover the soil between seasons or between rows of a main crop to protect from erosion -wind breaks:help control soil blowing in fields, protects homes and delicate plants from winter winds. They also reduce evaporation from soil
Erosion control practices drawings/pictures examples Requirement 3c
Explain what a watershed is Requirement 4a -an area that channels rainfall to creeks, streams, and rivers, and eventually to bigger bodies of water -watersheds are important because the surface water features and stormwater runoff drain to other bodies of water
Outline watersheds on a contour map Requirements 4b/4c Videos to help: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8bGKghgBF5Q https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ajF0DsuuY4k
River basin/why people living in it should be concerned about land and water use in it Requirement 4d -river basin is an area of land that is drained by a river and all its large and small tributaries Why people should be concerned: -disposal of human waste/pollutants -farming run off (chemicals and fertilizers) -creek damming up
Explain what an aquifer is and why it’s important to communities Requirement 4e -an underground layer of water -groundwater can be extracted using a water well -bearing of permeable rock and rock fractures -have always been critically important in sustaining human habitation, agriculture, and irrigation -sand filters the water out of the pollutants and bacteria does not grow in it
Draw the hydrological cycle Requirement 5a
Demonstrate 2 actions of water Requirement 5b transpiration precipitation Capillary action evaporation
Explain how removal of vegetation will affect the way water runs off Requirement 5c -it collects pollutants and increases speed -increase the volume of water that goes to the stream and shortens the amount of time it takes the water to get to there -this leads to flooding, stream bank erosion, widening of streams, a loss of fish habitat, and decline in water quality
Tell how uses of forest, range, and farm land affect usable water Requirement 5d -it can cause water pollution by dumping chemicals into the rivers, and the ground which can get into well water -it helps slow down the run off into the watershed and prevents flooding in other areas
Explain how industrial use affects usable water supply Requirement 5e -it's a huge source of water pollution -thermal pollution, toxic chemicals, human waste, oils, metals, etc are deposited into the water -it can contaminate aquifers
Tell what is meant by water pollution Requirement 6a -it's the contamination of bodies of water -water is considered polluted when it has things like bacteria, oil, salt, toxic chemicals, decaying vegetation, or litter that makes it unfit for a specific purpose
Common sources of water pollution Requirement 6b -plant nutrients: when phosphorus gets to a high level algae can take over and take oxygen out of the water and deplete aquatic life -infectious agents: pathogens are the leading cause in water pollution because they cause diseases; ex: typhoid, dysentery and hepatitis -sewage and organic wastes: left untreated, it can cause a body of water to smell bad & can upset the natural balance of a river or lake -salt & minerals: ex:salt, drainage from acid mines, strip mining of coal; if sulfur is combined with water it can create strong acids; if enough of that acid gets into streams no aquatic life could survive
Primary water treatment Requirement 6c -mainly involves removing the solids from wastewater -main process most towns use -step 1:trap rags, sticks, and other large objects -step 2:grit chamber- stones, sand, and other heavy inorganic materials sink to the bottom and are removed -step 3:wastewater goes through a settling tank where organic matter and fine particles of material settle and are collected, then grease floats to the surface, where they get skimmed off
Secondary waste treatment Requirement 6c -1st- aeration, either spraying wastewater into the air or blowing air into the water -2nd-water slowly passes over stones or other material, where biological growths decompose the leftover waste -3rd-gets treated with chlorine before being released into a body of water (to soak back into the ground)
Biochemical oxygen demand Requirement 6c -it's a chemical and physical water treatment process -water is no longer considered wastewater
Draw complete waste treatment Requirement 6d