Geography, asked by khatik44, 8 months ago

what are the chief characteristics of natural resources​

Answers

Answered by VISHALKUMARV22
13

Answer:

The chief characteristics of natural resources​-

  • Natural resources are valuable things found in nature. ...
  • Resource development refers to improving the ability to harvest resources. ...
  • Fallow land is undeveloped land. ...
  • Technology has increased our ability to harvest natural resources - e.g. complicated oil rigs on the ocean.

Answered by Tpshri
1

Answer:On the basis of origin, natural resources may be divided into two types:

Biotic — Biotic resources are obtained from the biosphere (living and organic material), such as forests and animals, and the materials that can be obtained from them. Fossil fuels such as coal and petroleum are also included in this category because they are formed from decayed organic matter.

Abiotic – Abiotic resources are those that come from non-living, non-organic material. Examples of abiotic resources include land, fresh water, air, rare earth metals and heavy metals including ores, such as, gold, iron, copper, silver, etc.

Considering their stage of development, natural resources may be referred to in the following ways:

Potential resources — Potential resources are those that may be used in the future—for example, petroleum in sedimentary rocks that, until drilled out and put to use remains a potential resource

Actual resources — Those resources that have been surveyed, quantified and qualified and, are currently used—development, such as wood processing, depends on technology and cost

Reserve resources — The part of an actual resource that can be developed profitably in the future

Stock resources — Those that have been surveyed, but cannot be used due to lack of technology—for example, hydrogen

Many natural resources can be categorized as either renewable or non-renewable:

Renewable resources — Renewable resources can be replenished naturally. Some of these resources, like sunlight, air, wind, water, etc. are continuously available and their quantities are not noticeably affected by human consumption. Though many renewable resources do not have such rapid recovery rate, these resources are susceptible to depletion by over-use. Resources from a human use perspective are classified as renewable so long as the rate of replenishment/recovery exceeds that of the rate of consumption. They replenish easily compared to Non-renewable resources.

Non-renewable resources – Non-renewable resources either form slowly or do not naturally form in the environment. Minerals are the most common resource included in this category. From the human perspective, resources are non-renewable when their rate of consumption exceeds the rate of replenishment/recovery; a good example of this are fossil fuels, which are in this category because their rate of formation is extremely slow (potentially millions of years), meaning they are considered non-renewable. Some resources actually naturally deplete in amount without human interference, the most notable of these being radio-active elements such as uranium, which naturally decay into heavy metals. Of these, the metallic minerals can be re-used by recycling them,[5] but coal and petroleum cannot be recycled.[6] Once they are completely used they take millions of years to replenish.

Explanation:

Natural resources are valuable things found in nature. ...

Resource development refers to improving the ability to harvest resources. ...

Fallow land is undeveloped land. ...

Technology has increased our ability to harvest natural resources - e.g. complicated oil rigs on the ocean.

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