Chapter 2 - Earth's Physical Systems Flashcards
(100 cards)
Natural capital
Earths accumulating wealth of resources.
Environment
The sum total of our surroundings, including all of living things and non-living things with witch we interact.
enviromentalsim
a social movement dedicated to protecting the natural world, and by extension, people.
science
(1) a systematic process for learning about the world and testing our understanding of it. (2) the accumulating body of knowledge that arises from dynamic process.
descriptive science/observable science
research in which scientists gather basic information about organisms, materials, systems, or processes that are not yet well known.
hypothesis driven science
research in which scientists prose questions that seek to explain how and why things are the way they are. generally proceeds in a somewhat structural manner, using experiments to test the hypothesis.
scientific method
a formalized method for testing ideas and observations that involves series of interrelated steps.
experiment
an activity designed to test the validity of a hypothesis by manipulating certain variables.
variable
in an experiment, a condition that can change.
independent variable
the variable that scientists manipulate in an experiment.
dependent variable
the variable that is affected by manipulation of the independent variable in an experiment.
controlled experiment
an experiment in which a treatment is compared against a control in order to test the effect of the variable.
control
the portion of an experiment in which a variable has been left un-manipulated, to serve as a point of comparison with the treatment.
treatment
the portion of an experiment in which a variable has been changed/manipulated in order to test its effects.
data
information, generally quantitive information.
manipulative experiment
an experiment in which the researchers actively choose and manipulate the independent variable.
natural experiment
an experiment in which the researchers cannot directly manipulate the variables and therefore must observe nature, comparing conditions in which variables differ, and interpret the results.
peer review
the process by which a manuscript submitted for publication in an academic journal is examined by specialists in the field, who provide criticism (generally anonymously) and judge wether the work merits publication in the journal.
theory
a widely accepted, well tested explanation of one or more cause-and-effect relationships that has been extensively validated by a great amount of research.
paradigm
a dominant philosophical and theoretical framework within a scientific discipline.
wicked problems
problems complex enough to have no simple solution, and whose very nature changes over time.
predictions
specific statements that can be directly and unequivocally tested.
tsunami
an immerse swell, or wave of ocean water triggered by an earthquake, volcano, or landslide that can travel long distances across oceans and intricate coasts
matter
all material in the universe that has mass and occupies space