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Ecological Footprint
by Mathis Wackernagel and Bert Beyers

Everyone, big or small, has an Ecological Footprint. How much nature people need depends on what they eat, how they dress, what their home is like, how they move around, and how they get rid of their waste. All of that can be measured. The resulting data allows us to determine the area of biologically productive land and water that is required to grow food, produce fiber for clothing, build houses to shelter people, and absorb their waste. We can measure the carbon dioxide from burning coal, gas, and oil. In the end, we all live on what the “global farm” provides, and we can accurately measure what the farm provides, and what people consume.

Authors Mathis Wackernagel & Bert Beyers, New Society Publishers, 2019

Question
Use the passage to answer the question.

Based on this introductory paragraph, which statement describes the topic of this chapter?

(1 point)
Responses

Everyone depends on and uses the Earth's resources, although in different measures.
Everyone depends on and uses the Earth's resources, although in different measures.

If the world's people do not reduce their carbon footprints, the Earth will be in danger.
If the world's people do not reduce their carbon footprints, the Earth will be in danger.

The amount of carbon dioxide that a person's activities create forms the basis of their carbon footprint.
The amount of carbon dioxide that a person's activities create forms the basis of their carbon footprint.

Methods to determine each person's impact on the Earth's resources have been developed.
Methods to determine each person's impact on the Earth's resources have been developed.

1 answer

Based on the introductory paragraph, the statement that best describes the topic of this chapter is:

Everyone depends on and uses the Earth's resources, although in different measures.

This statement encapsulates the overall theme of the passage, which discusses how different activities contribute to an individual's Ecological Footprint, reflecting the varying extent to which people rely on the Earth's resources.