acid rain
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
acid rain or acid deposition, form of precipitation (rain, snow, sleet, or hail) containing high levels of sulfuric or nitric acids ( p H below 5.5-5.6). Produced when sulfur dioxide and various nitrogen oxides combine with atmospheric moisture, acid rain can contaminate drinking water, damage vegetation and aquatic life, and erode buildings and monuments. Automobile exhausts and the burning of high-sulfur industrial fuels are thought to be the main causes, but natural sources, such as volcanic gases and forest fires, may also be significant. It has been an increasingly serious problem since the 1950s, particularly in the NE United States, Canada, and W Europe, especially Scandinavia.
Acid rain became a political issue in the 1980s, when Canada claimed that pollutants from the United States were contaminating its forests and waters. Since then regulations have been enacted in North America and Europe to curb sulfur dioxide emissions from power plants; these include the U.S. Clean Air Act (as reauthorized and expanded in 1990) and the Helsinki protocol (1985), in which 21 European nations promised to reduce emissions by specified amounts. To assess the effectiveness of reductions a comprehensive study, comparing data from lakes and rivers across N Europe and North America, was conducted by an international team of scientists in 1999. The results they reported were mixed: while sulfates (the main acidifying water pollutant from acid rain) were lower, only some areas showed a decrease in overall acidity. It remained to be determined whether more time or a greater reduction in sulfur emissions was needed to reduce freshwater acidity in all areas. See air pollution ; forest ; pollution .
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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
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Regional influences and environmental policymaking: a study of acid rain.
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New acid rain threat identified. (nitrate induced suffocation and light starvation of aquatic species)
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acid rain
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acid rain
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
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acid rain
The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
ac·id rain • n. rainfall made sufficiently acidic by atmospheric pollution that it causes environmental harm, typically to forests and lakes.
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Acids and Bases
Science of Everyday Things
... the human body, including hydrochloric acid or stomach acid — which, in large quantities, causes indigestion ... produces acids that are toxic to humans, such as sulfuric acid. Though direct exposure to sulfuric acid is extremely dangerous, the substance has numerous applications. Not only is ...
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