Concept cluster: Philosophy > Human-caused environmental damage
n
A person who takes an active role in animal welfare.
n
One who engages in animal testing
adj
Doing harm to the natural environment.
n
(idiomatic, obsolete) barbarous Latin; badly-spoken Latin.
n
A subgenre of ecofiction with issues about climate change as the main focus.
n
Wise use of natural resources.
n
Recreational travel to view the sites of former atrocities.
n
An apocalyptic destruction of the Earth's environment.
n
An ecological catastrophe, especially a man-made disaster that affects the environment
adj
Destructive of the environment.
n
The complete destruction of an ecosystem due to human activities, such as due to exploitation of resources, nuclear warfare, or the dumping of harmful chemicals.
n
An ecological disaster.
n
A horror genre dealing with things that go wrong in the natural environment.
n
The destruction of an economic system by replacing it with a market economy.
n
The commission of usually illegal acts of sabotage motivated by environmentalism.
n
Destruction of Earth.
n
Crime that harms the environment, such as graffiti or fly-tipping.
n
Criminal activity, such as pollution, that harms the environment.
n
An area of natural parkland within an urban region, supposed to replenish the air with oxygen.
n
(slang, derogatory) A newcomer; a recent immigrant.
n
One who greenmails.
n
Large-scale destruction.
n
Alternative form of monkeywrenching [The commission of usually illegal acts of sabotage motivated by environmentalism.]
n
The commission of usually illegal acts of sabotage motivated by environmentalism.
n
A person who has an intense interest in the natural world, especially one who frequents natural places for enjoyment and recreation.
adj
Having a minimal impact on the natural environment; environmentally friendly.
n
The belief that the world has reached peak oil.
n
One who takes part in a historical reenactment.
n
(non-native speakers' English, chiefly Quebec) Recreational tourism.
n
(US) A large amount of money designated for environmental cleanup by the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) of 1980.
n
(ecology, economics, politics, social criticism) A situation in which unmanaged use of a shared resource (such as the atmosphere or an ocean) by a number of participants results in the unintended ruin or total consumption of that resource.
adj
Environmentally unfriendly; harmful to or inconsiderate of the environment.
n
(Alaska) Catastrophic land collapse caused by the melting of permafrost, coastal flooding and erosion.
n
Recreation that wrecks or harms the environment. For example, running off-road vehicles and mountain bikes through ecologically sensitive areas, running boats with large wakes in narrow watercourses so as to cause bank erosion, climbing in areas where raptors nest, or simply hiking in areas that disturb existing flora, fauna and archaeological resources.

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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