Thursday, November 14, 2019
Stop The Deforestation :: essays research papers fc
 "This land is where we know where to find all that it provides for us--food  from hunting and fishing, and farms, building and tool materials,  medicines. This land keeps us together within its mountains; we come to  understand that we are not just a few people or separate villages, but one  people belonging to a homeland" (Colins 32). The "homeland" is the Upper  Mazaruni District of Guyana, a region in the Amazon rain forest where the  Akawaio Indians make their home (32). The vast rain forest, often  regarded as just a mass of trees and exotic species, is to many indigenous  people a home. This home is being destroyed as miners, loggers, and  developers move in on the cultures of these people to strip away their  resources and complicate the peaceful, simple lives of these primitive  tribes. However, the tribes are not the only ones who lose in this  situtation. If rain forest invasion continues, mankind as a whole will lose a  valuable treasure: the knowledge of these people in utilizing the resources  and plants of the forest for food, building, and medicine. To prevent this  loss, the governments of the countries housing the rain forests should  provide some protection for the forest and its inhabitants through  legislation, programs. Also, environmentalists should pursue educating  the tribes in managing thier resources for pragmatic, long-term profit  through conservation.       Although hard to believe, the environmental problems of today  started a long time before electricty was invented, before automobilies  littered the highways, and before industries dotted the countryside. From   ancient times to the Industrial Revolution, humans began to change the  face of the earth. As populations increased and technology improved and  expanded, more significant and widespread problems arose. "Today,  unprecedented demands on the environment from a rapidly expanding  human population and from advancing technology are causing a continuing  and acelerating decline in the quality of the environment and its ability to  sustain life" (Ehrlich 98). Increasing numbers of humans are intruding on  remaining wild land-even in those areas once considered relatively safe  from exploitation. Tropical forests, especially in southest Asia and the  Amazon River Basin, are being destroyed at an alarming rate for timber,  conversion to crop and grazing lands, pine plantations, and settlements.   According to researcher Howard Facklam, "It was estimated at one point in  the 1980s that such forest lands were being cleared at the rate of 20  (nearly 50 acres) a minute; another estimate put the rate at more than  200,000 sq km (more than 78,000 sq mi) a year. In 1993, satellite data  provided the rate of deforestation could result in the extinction of as many    					    
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