Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESPE / CEBRASPE
Orgão: UNIPAMPA
The ecological impact of the Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution marked a major turning
point on Earth’s ecology and humans’ relationship with their
environment. As the Industrial Revolution dramatically
changed every aspect of human life and lifestyles — from
human development, health and life longevity, to social
improvements — its human impact on natural resources,
public health, energy usage and sanitation would not begin
to register in the world’s psyche until the early 1960s, some
200 years after its beginnings.
It wasn’t that the Industrial Revolution became a
stalwart juggernaut overnight. It started in the mid-1700s in
Great Britain when machinery began to replace manual labor
and fossil fuels replaced wind, water, and wood primarily for
the manufacture of textiles and the development of iron
making processes. The full impact of the Industrial
Revolution would not begin to be realized until about 100
years later in the 1800s when the use of machines to replace
human labor spread throughout Europe, North America and
the rest of the world. This transformation is referred to as the
industrialization of the world — processes that gave rise to
sweeping increases in production capacity and would affect
all basic human needs including food production, medicine,
housing, and clothing. Not only did society develop the
ability to have more things quicker, it would be able to
develop better things. These industrialization processes
continue today.
Internet: ecology.com (adapted)
According to the text, the Industrial Revolution
was a drama for mankind.