Depletion
81depletion of the ozone — gradual destruction of the ozone layer (region of the stratosphere which contains much of the Earth s atmospheric ozone) …
82depletion accounting — A method of calculating the depreciation of a wasting asset, based on the rate at which it is being used. For example, a coal mine could be depreciated on the basis of the rate at which coal is extracted from it …
83depletion deduction — A deduction allowed in an income tax return to the owner of an economic interest in mineral deposits or standing timber. IRC § 613(a) …
84depletion ration — noun : a basic experimental ration designed to exhaust the body reserve of a specific nutrient while maintaining other dietary requirements in balance …
85depletion allowance — a tax reduction allowed on income from exhaustible resources, as oil or timber …
86Ozone depletion — Image of the largest Antarctic ozone hole ever recorded (September 2006) Ozone depletion describes two distinct but related phenomena observed since the late 1970s: a steady decline of about 4% per decade in the total volume of ozone in Earth s… …
87Ego-Depletion — Bei dem Begriff Ego Depletion (von lateinisch depletio → la, deplere → la ausleeren, i.e. Selbsterschöpfung) handelt sich um ein Paradigma aus der Sozialpsychologie für den Bereich selbstregulatorischen Verhaltens. Die zentrale Aussage des Ego… …
88Resource depletion — For other uses, see Depletion (disambiguation). Resource depletion is an economic term referring to the exhaustion of raw materials within a region. Resources are commonly divided between renewable resources and non renewable resources. (See also …
89Scientific Assessment of Ozone Depletion — The Scientific Assessment of Ozone Depletion is a sequence of reports sponsored by WMO/UNEP. The most recent is the [http://www.wmo.int/pages/prog/arep/gaw/ozone 2006/ozone asst report.html 2006 report] .The reports were set up to inform the… …
90Oil depletion — per major producing country. This model assumes world oil depletion remains constant at the 2004 level of 80 million barrels per day.[1] However, world oil depletion is currently (as of 2008) at 85 million barrels per day …