2. Environment
•The surroundings or
conditions in which a
person, animal, or plant
lives or operates
•The natural world, as a
whole or in a particular
geographical area,
especially as affected
by human activity.
3. There are many different types of environments.
There is
• Arid,
• Grasslands,
• Mountains,
• Arctic,
• Wetlands,
• Forest,
• Tundra
• and Oceanic are the main types.
Types of environment
4. Impact On health
Impacts from Heat Waves
Impacts from Extreme Weather Events
Impacts from Reduced Air Quality
Impacts from Climate-Sensitive Diseases
Impact On behavior
Impact On Life
Impact on human Development
Environment Impact On Humans
6. We burn fuel to
heat our homes
Gasoline
We use fuel in our
vehicles.
Fuel
7. We use to build our
structure and devices.
Minerals
8. We wears and color
our perception of
theology and reality.
Clothes
9. when a certain amount of UV
rays penetrates the skin, it
helps the human body use
vitamin D to absorb the
calcium necessary for strong
bones.
Impact On Bones
10. • Pollution
• Reduced air
Quality(Anxity ,
lung problems)
• Necessary For Life(Oxygen)
• Certain Chemical 7 Bio
Chemical Reactions
Air Quality
11. • There are many different types of environmental
disease including:
• Lifestyle disease such as cardiovascular disease,
diseases caused by substance abuse such as
alcoholism, and smoking-related disease
• Disease caused by physical factors in the
environment, such as skin cancer caused by
excessive exposure to ultraviolet radiation in
sunlight
• Disease caused by exposure to chemicals in the
environment such as toxic metals
Types Of Environmental dieses
12. First, there are those caused by the ancient metals :
lead and mercury.
Then there are those caused by the other metals:
arsenic, phosphorus, and zinc.
The newer metals can also cause environmental
disease: beryllium, cadmium, chromium, manganese,
nickel, cobalt, osmium, platinum, selenium,
tellurium, thallium, uranium, and vanadium.
Categories of environmental disease
13. Ground-level ozone is formed when certain air pollutants, such as
carbon monoxide, oxides of nitrogen (also called NOX), and
volatile organic compounds, are exposed to each other in sunlight.
Ground-level ozone is one of the pollutants in smog.
Formation Of Ground level Ozone
14. • Changes in climate may enhance the spread of
some diseases.Disease-causing agents, called
pathogens, can be transmitted through food,
water, and animals such as deer, birds, mice,
and insects. Climate change could affect all of
these transmitters.
Impacts from Climate-Sensitive Diseases
15. Higher air temperatures can
increase cases of salmonella
and other bacteria-related food
poisoning because bacteria
grow more rapidly in warm
environments. These diseases
can cause gastrointestinal
distress and, in severe cases,
death.
16. The environment can create or reduce
stress, which in turn impacts our
bodies in multiple ways. This is
because our brain and our nervous,
endocrine, and immune systems are
constantly interacting. According to
neuroscientist , "What you are
thinking at any moment is changing
your biochemistry."
Stress
20. Variations in human skin color are adaptive
traits that correlate closely with geography and
the sun’s ultraviolet (UV) radiation.
•Melanin, the skin's brown pigment, is a natural
sunscreen that protects tropical peoples from
the many harmful effects of ultraviolet (UV)
rays.
(Sub-Saharan African, Indian, Southern European, and Northern European
Human Skin Color Variation
21. UV rays can, for
example, strip
away folic acid, a
nutrient
essential to the
development of
healthy fetuses.
Impact On Human Development
23. Lifestyle is the typical
way of life of an
individual, group, or
culture.
•In Winter People Use
Warm Clothes & Dry
Fruits
•In Summer They use
Thin & Waste Clothes
Impact On Life Style
25. • Heat Stroke
• Dehydration
• Northern Latitude Ares & High Temperature
• Climate Condition will Likely To Extreme Weather
Conditions(Heavy Rain Causing Flooding)
Heat wave
26. Extreme Events
Negative Impact
• Volcanoes
• Earth Quick
• Flooding
• Tornadoes
• Heavy Rain fall
Positive Impact
• Formation Of New land
• New Valleys
• Fertile Ground
• Soil Exchange
• Source Of water
27. The geographic range of
ticks that carry Lyme disease
is limited by temperature. As
air temperatures rise, the
range of these ticks is likely
to continue to expand
northward. Typical
symptoms of Lyme
disease include fever,
headache, fatigue, and a
characteristic skin rash.
Ticks are ectoparasites, living by
hematophagy on the blood of
mammals, birds, and
sometimes reptiles and
amphibians
Lyme Disease