Acid Rain
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Acid rain is a kind of air pollution. When coal, oil, or gasoline are burned, they release harmful gases into the air. These gases mix with the moisture that is always present in the air and form weak acids. Wind can carry the acidic droplets huge distances. Eventually, these droplets return to the ground as acid rain or as acid hail, snow, sleet, or even fog.
Acid rain looks, feels, and tastes just like clean rain. For humans, walking in acid rain, or even swimming in a lake polluted by acid rain, is no more dangerous than walking or swimming in clean water. But acid rain is extremely harmful to the environment.
When acid rain gets into lakes and streams, it kills the fish and other animals and plants that live there. Many rivers in Scandinavia no longer have any fish. All the fish have been killed by acid rain.
Acid rain can also damage plants on land, including farm crops and forests. By the mid-1980s, acid rain had damaged or killed almost half of the trees in Germanys Black Forest.
The outside surfaces of stone buildings and monuments can also be corroded, or worn away, by acid rain. Some of the worlds greatest buildings and monuments show signs of damage caused by acid rain. Acid rain eats away at the steel in bridges and railings as well.
Acid rain is not natural, but its also not new. The problem began in the 1700s with the Industrial Revolution. It has been growing ever since. In the past, city air was sooty from thousands of coal fires. The soot turned buildings black and produced acid rain. Trees and other plants near large industrial cities were dead or dying. Today, people burn less coal, but there are many more fuel-burning power stations, cars, trucks, buses, and aircraft. All of these pollute the air and contribute to acid rain.
Most of the gases that produce acid rain come from power stations, factories, and vehicles. Power stations