Environmental Science (TASC Level 3)

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Environmental Science (TASC Level 3) - An Introduction

In studying Environmental Science, learners develop their investigative, analytical and communication skills.

Learners apply these skills to their understanding of ecology and environmental issues in order to engage in public debate, solve problems and make evidence-based decisions about contemporary environmental issues in society.

TASC. Environmental Science. Level 3, ESS315118, 2020.

Course Information for TASC Environmental Science level 3 can be found here.

Library Resources
CSIRO Image Library
eReserve
Web Resources

Library Resources

The Library catalogue is a powerful searching tool that can quickly locate material in our collections.

Dewey Numbers

The following Dewey Number will locate material on our shelves:

  • 333.7 Conservation of natural resources
  • 363.7 Environmental science
  • 577+ Biometric systems and ecosystems

Keyword searching

Enter a word or phrase into a basic keyword search. Some suggestions, with results could include:

Subject searching:

Collection highlights

eBooks

Issues in Society

Reference resources

On the shelf

CSIRO Image Library

The CSIRO Science Image Library has an extensive selection of images you can use in your assignments. They are available to download and copy under a Creative Commons licence. You must acknowledge and provide a citation to the CSIRO when you use any of these images.

eReserve

Web Resources

Be careful what you download and use from the Internet.

Before using information from a web address ensure you are looking at a publication from a legitimate source. Material from the Internet often does not acknowledge the author or creator, does not cite references or footnotes, or include any type of bibliography or reference list. Use this type of material with caution. As part of your research process you need to sort out the reliable sources from the less trustworthy sites.

If in doubt always check with your teacher. For further information read the Library Fact Sheet Evaluating Information from the Web.

Faculty resources: All material purchased for the teachers in the Science Faculty is also available for student use if it is not required by the teachers. The resources are kept in the Library and can be found by using the Library catalogue.

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Natural Disasters and Weather

Natural disasters can also be known as "acts of God" because they can strike with little or no warning and without any human involvement.

Types of Disasters
Library Resources
Land
Weather
Water

Types of Disasters

Natural disasters can kill many thousands of people each year. They roughly fall into three broad groupings:

  • geological events, triggered by the internal workings of our planet;
  • meteorological events, caused by variations in global weather patterns;
  • and biological disasters, resulting from the actions of living agents such as diseases or insect pests.

These disasters can occur separately or together, and are generally, although not always, unrelated.

Coenraads, R, edt, 2008, Natural disasters and how we cope, The Five Mile Press, Rowville, Vic.

This subject guide looks at the following topics:

  • Land: Bushfires, drought, earthquakes, landslides, plate tectonics or volcanoes
  • Weather: Cyclones and hurricanes
  • Water: Tsunamis, floods and storms

Library Resources

On the shelves

Other general resources which may contain the information you are looking for can be found by using the Library catalogue:

eBooks

Issues in Society Digital Editions

Reference Resources

General Encyclopedia

  • Encyclopedia Britannica
  • World Book Encyclopedia

Land

Introduction

'As old as the hills', 'as solid as rock', are just two of the phrases we use to express the permanence of the world around us. Some of our highest mountains, however, are among the most recent features of the landscape.  They have developed and grown because of movements within the earth itself, movements that can crumble rocks and create new ones, and that can displace the very waters of the oceans themselves.  Most of these movements are apparent only over the millennia, but sometimes they happen with great suddenness in a particular place, and when they do, their effect on the human beings that live there can be disastrous. 

Dixon, Dougal 1996, 'Land and sea on the move', Natural disasters, Reader's Digest, pp. 13

On the shelves

On the shelves: Personal narratives

eBooks

Infobase

Issues in Society

Web Resources

Bushfires / Wildfires - Australia

Bushfires / Wildfires - International

Drought

Drought - Australia

Drought - International

Earthquakes

Earthquakes - Australia

Earthquakes - International

Indonesia

Italy

Japan

Nepal

New Zealand

Solomon Islands

South America

Landslides

Landslides - Australia

Landslides - International

Volcanoes

General facts and information

International


Weather

Introduction

The atmosphere is in constant turmoil.  On a global scale, it acts as a giant heat exchange, in which the hot air in the tropics rises and moves towards the poles, while cooler heavier air rushes in to take its place.  Averaged out over the years, these movements form the conditions we call climates.  Day-day-day variations in these climatic patterns produce what is known as weather.  These variations can be extreme, including hurricanes that cut across the sea - and sometimes the land as well - and deadly tornadoes, which are narrow funnels of extreme low pressure and extraordinary destructiveness.

Dixon, Dougal 1996, 'The Restless air', Natural disasters', Reader's Digest, p. 86

On the shelves

Web Resources

Cyclones - Australia

Cyclones - International

Hurricanes - International

Typhoons - International


Water

Introduction

Flood.  Heavy storms may sometimes cause huge volumes of water to depart from a river's natural course and spread over previously dry land.  Unstoppable and all-pervasive, the resulting floods can be devastating to human life.

Dixon, Dougal 1996, 'Flood alert', Natural disasters, Reader's Digest, p.110

Tsunami. Imagine a flood of water swirling up the street, lifting cars and flinging them through flimsy buildings as it goes.  Then imagine the buildings themselves being washed away, leaving behind little more than scattered piles of rubble.

Dixon, Dougal 1996, 'Tsunami: wave of terror', Natural disasters', Reader's Digest, p. 52

On the shelves

Subject Headings

On the shelves: Personal narratives

On the shelves: Writers responses

Web Resources

Floods - Australia

Floods - Launceston

Floods - International

Tsunami - Australia:

Tsunami - International:

Indonesia:

Japan:

Pacific: