01381 2200301 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020001800097041000800115082001000123084001600133100002700149245008600176250000800262260003300270300003300303500002300336520051500359650002600874700002300900990002600923990002600949990002600975990002601001990002601027990002601053INLIS00000000000074220221111083543 a0010-0520000742221111 | | eng  a9780072823394 aeng a363.7 a363.7 CUN p0 aCunningham, William P.1 aPriciples of Environmental Science Inquiry & Application /cWilliam P. Cunningham a3nd aBoston :bMcGraw Hill,c2006 axviii, 376 p.;27 cm ;c27 cm aIndeks : p.401-428 aRows of windmills march across California's Altamont Pass. A tremendous resource, wind power could potentially replace all the energy we currently obtain from fossil fuels and nuclear reactors. Some European nations already produce more than 20 percent of their electricity from wind power with a concomitant reduction of greenhouse gases. In places with steady winds, modern wind turbines are now the cheapest source of new generating capacity. See chapter 12 for more information on renewable energy sources. 4aEnvironmental Science0 aMary AnnCunningham a12281/MKRI-P/III-2009 a12282/MKRI-P/III-2009 a12281/MKRI-P/III-2009 a12282/MKRI-P/III-2009 a12282/MKRI-P/III-2009 a12281/MKRI-P/III-2009