Pollution
A contamination becomes beyond natural correction when the levels of pollutants or harmful substances exceed the environment's ability to restore itself through natural processes. This can result in long-term damage to ecosystems and wildlife, making it challenging or impossible for the environment to recover without human intervention.
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Asbestos is a naturally occurring mineral. Where mineral outcrops are located, natural processes of erosion release asbestos fibers. Beyond that, people mined asbestos to use in a variety of applications. The asbestos-containing products can release fibers into the environment if not properly maintained or if discarded improperly.
Boots or Superdrug. Or online :)
False. Organisms are never ' perfectly adapted to the environment, as evolution is blind and can not predict the future, or create anew. All is ' tinkered ' together in the organism on top of adaptions that were from past environments. Natural selection adapts as best it can to the immediate environment and carries vestigial traits and poor engineering solutions on to future generations. ( appendix and the hole in the retina for two examples of this ) While man can shape his environment only a benighted social scientists could think we, as living organisms. are beyond natural selection and evolution, or that we have been perfectly adapted to the present environment.
In the United States, $12.99
Deep ocean basin
See http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080722222615AAcfBvp ; it is a similar question.
The classification of natural disasters as acts of God varies depending on the context. In legal terms, acts of God are typically defined as events beyond human control, such as some natural disasters. However, from a religious or philosophical perspective, attributing natural disasters solely to God may not account for scientific explanations or human impact on the environment.
it is beyond the thinking of a human being it is natural which our mind can not reach that much
None. Sad loss but no appreciable change in the environment beyond that which caused the extinction.