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Explore how communities around the world design and share solutions to protect our planet's air, water, land, and living things.
This is remarkable because flooding is caused by natural forces — rain, tides, and gravity — that humans cannot simply turn off. So how did one community manage to protect itself from a powerful Earth process without stopping that process entirely?
To understand how communities can protect the planet, we first need to understand what they're protecting and why it matters. Earth is made up of four major connected systems: the geosphere (rocks and land), the hydrosphere (water), the atmosphere (air), and the biosphere (living things). These systems constantly interact with each other — water flows over land, living things breathe air, and rocks break down into soil that supports plants. When one system is affected, the others feel the impact too.
Human activities like building cities, farming, manufacturing, and burning fossil fuels can disrupt these interactions. For example, cutting down forests removes trees that absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and hold soil in place with their roots. Without those trees, more CO₂ stays in the air (affecting the atmosphere), soil washes into rivers (affecting the hydrosphere), and animals lose their homes (affecting the biosphere). The key scientific idea here is that human activities affect Earth's systems, but communities can design and communicate solutions to reduce those negative impacts.
Scientists and engineers don't work alone — they share their findings and evaluate each other's solutions. In this investigation, you'll practice this same skill by comparing how different communities have designed solutions to protect Earth systems, then communicating your evaluation to others.
Investigation question: Which types of community solutions are most effective at protecting different Earth systems?
What you would do:
Materials for research: Data table below, access to additional sources if available, chart paper or digital presentation tool.
| Community Solution | Location | Earth System(s) Protected | How It Works | Measured Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Urban tree planting program | Portland, Oregon, USA | Atmosphere, Biosphere, Geosphere | Volunteers plant trees in neighborhoods to absorb CO₂, provide habitat, and reduce soil erosion | 236,000 trees planted; removes ~3,800 tons of CO₂/year |
| River cleanup & wetland restoration | Chesapeake Bay, Maryland, USA | Hydrosphere, Biosphere | Communities reduce pollution runoff and restore wetland areas that naturally filter water and provide wildlife habitat | Nitrogen pollution down 16%; underwater grasses increased 95% |
| Community solar energy program | Freiburg, Germany | Atmosphere | Entire neighborhoods switched from fossil fuels to solar panels on rooftops, reducing greenhouse gas emissions | CO₂ emissions reduced by 40% in participating areas |
When we examine the investigation data closely, a clear picture emerges. Each community solution was designed to address a specific human impact on an Earth system, and each one produced measurable results. Portland's tree-planting program didn't just make streets look nicer — those 236,000 trees actively absorb nearly 3,800 tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere every year. That's the same amount of CO₂ produced by driving a car around the Earth over 400 times. The trees also hold soil in place with their roots (protecting the geosphere) and provide habitat for birds and insects (protecting the biosphere).
The Chesapeake Bay project shows how solutions that target one system often benefit others. When communities reduced the pollution flowing into the bay (hydrosphere), underwater grasses grew back dramatically — a 95% increase. Those grasses then became food and shelter for fish, crabs, and other organisms (biosphere). The restored wetlands acted like a natural sponge, soaking up excess rainwater before it could flood nearby neighborhoods. This is similar to what Norfolk did with its flood solutions — using natural processes to solve human problems.
The Freiburg solar energy program reveals something important about communicating solutions. After Freiburg shared its data showing a 40% reduction in CO₂ emissions, hundreds of other European cities adopted similar programs. The act of communicating the results clearly — with specific numbers and evidence — helped the solution spread far beyond one community. This is exactly what scientists and engineers do: they gather evidence, evaluate whether a solution works, and then share their findings so others can benefit.
Looking at the comparison, an important pattern stands out: solutions that work with natural processes — like planting trees or restoring wetlands — tend to protect more Earth systems at once. That's because living things are already part of the biosphere and naturally interact with the atmosphere, hydrosphere, and geosphere. Technology-based solutions like solar panels are powerful for specific problems (reducing CO₂ in the atmosphere) but may not directly address other systems. This is why many communities combine both approaches for the best results.
The crosscutting concept that runs through this entire lesson is Systems and System Models. A system is a group of related parts that work together, and what happens in one part of a system affects other parts. This idea doesn't just apply to Earth science — it shows up across all areas of science. When scientists study any system, they look at how the parts interact and what happens when one part changes.
In our Norfolk phenomenon, the community understood that their flooding problem wasn't just about too much rain (hydrosphere). It was about how water interacted with paved surfaces (geosphere changes made by humans), how the removal of natural wetlands eliminated nature's sponges (biosphere and hydrosphere), and how warmer air holds more moisture, leading to heavier storms (atmosphere). By understanding the system, they could design solutions that addressed multiple parts of the problem at once.
| Science Area | The System | How Parts Interact | What Happens When One Part Changes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Earth Science (this lesson) | Earth's four spheres | Water flows over land, air carries moisture, living things affect soil and air | Removing forests → more CO₂ in air + more erosion + lost habitat |
| Life Science | Ecosystem food web | Producers make food, consumers eat producers, decomposers recycle nutrients | Remove one predator → prey population explodes → plants get eaten up → whole web shifts |
| Physical Science | Water cycle system | Evaporation, condensation, and precipitation move water continuously | Increased evaporation (from warming) → more intense rainstorms → more flooding |
| Engineering | City drainage system | Pipes, gutters, drains, and retention ponds manage water flow | Clogged drain → water backs up → flooding in streets even during normal rain |
Around the world, communities are using science and engineering to protect Earth systems every day. Here are some remarkable examples of how the science you've just learned is being put into action:
Imagine your school wants to reduce its negative impact on the local environment. The schoolyard has a large parking lot (impervious surface that causes water runoff), a grassy field, and a small area of bare soil that's eroding. Using the engineering design process, you and your classmates could work together to develop a solution.