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Fact sheets

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  Quiz 1999

Fact sheet page:  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  Quiz 1999  Quiz 2000 

Environment Canada's 2000 Ozone Quiz

September 16 is the International Day for the Preservation of the Ozone Layer. This year's theme is "Save Our Sky: Protect Yourself and Protect the Ozone Layer".

The day was designated by the United Nations in recognition of the anniversary of the signing of the 1987 Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer. The Protocol, the first international agreement of its kind, sets a global precedent for safeguarding both the environment and human health.

To mark the occasion, Environment Canada has designed a new quiz to test your knowledge on the ozone layer, ozone depletion and UV radiation. Can you get 1,000,000 points?

  1. Ozone is found throughout the whole atmosphere but is concentrated in the:



  2. There is "good" ozone and "bad" ozone in the atmosphere. The "good" ozone in the stratosphere protects us from:



  3. The ozone hole, which has occurred over the Antarctic each spring, develops due to:



  4. The Montreal Protocol on substances that deplete the ozone layer was signed in what year?



  5. How many countries have ratified the Montreal Protocol?



  6. Since the signing of the Montreal Protocol, there have been four amendments to strengthen the Protocol in eliminating ozone-depleting substances. Where were the amendments signed?



  7. The Montreal Protocol limits production and consumption of ozone depleting substances. How do we in Canada get rid of these industrial chemicals?



  8. Depletion of the ozone layer causes a corresponding increase in UV radiation. For every 1 percent decrease in the ozone layer, what is the increase in UV radiation at the surface of the earth?



  9. This year, current measurements indicate that the ozone hole over the Antarctic has reached record proportions. How large was the ozone hole (ozone depletion area) on Sept 3, 2000?



  10. The record size of this year's ozone hole indicates how frail the ozone layer is. Although the hole is not expected to expand much further, ozone values will continue to fall in the interior. How low are ozone values expected to fall in the lower stratosphere within the ozone hole?



  11. Last winter, scientists from Canada, Europe, Russia, Japan and the United States studied Arctic ozone levels. How severe was the ozone depletion detected in the Arctic ozone levels at certain altitudes this past winter and spring?



  12. Although the Montreal Protocol curtailed production of ozone depleting substances, the peak concentration of chemicals in the stratosphere is only now being reached. A recovery will only occur if all nations implement the controls of the Montreal Protocol. When do scientists expect a recovery in the ozone to occur?



  13. The bromine released from methyl bromide is about 40 times more damaging to the ozone layer than chlorine on molecule-to-molecule bases. Under the Montreal Protocol methyl bromide in developed countries will be phased out in 2005. What is methyl bromide used for?



  14. What was the last country to ratify the Montreal Protocol?



  15. What can I do to "save the sky: Protect myself and save the ozone layer"?



 


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Created : 2002-09-18
Modified : 2004-03-05
Reviewed : 2004-03-05
Url of this page : http://www.msc.ec.gc.ca
/cd/factsheets/ozone/quiz2000/index_e.cfm

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