Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water...

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Water Cycle Water Cycle

Transcript of Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water...

Page 1: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

Water CycleWater Cycle

Page 2: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

What is the water cycle?What is the water cycle?

• This is how water circulates through our environment

• Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete the water cycle.

Page 3: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

EvaporationEvaporation

• Water evaporates into the atmosphere from the ocean, lakes, etc.

• Evaporation = liquid gas

Page 4: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

CondensationCondensation• When water vapor particles join together

to form a liquid and condense into clouds or dew.

• Condensation = gas liquid

Page 5: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

PrecipitationPrecipitation

• Rain or snow that falls to the Earth

Page 6: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

InfiltrationInfiltration

• The seeping in of water into soil or rocks through the cracks in the ground.

• Eventually, this water goes back into the lakes and rivers.

Page 7: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

RunoffRunoff• Water that flows downslope on Earth’s

surface and may enter a stream, river, or lake.

• The rate of runoff is influenced by the angle of the slope, vegetation, rate of precipitation and soil composition.

• Water that doesn’t go through infiltration, goes through runoff.

Page 8: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

RunoffRunoff

Page 9: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

TranspirationTranspiration• When plants absorb the water and then

release it back into the atmosphere through evaporation

• Evaporation off of a plant

Page 10: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

Water CycleWater Cycle

Page 11: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

The Structure of HydrosphereThe Structure of Hydrosphere

• Oceans—96.5% of water found here

• Fresh water—3.5% of water found here

• Fresh water distribution:– Ice: 1.762%

– Groundwater: 1.7%

– Surface Fresh Water: 0.014%

– Atmosphere and soil: 0.002%

Page 12: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

Understanding Where Your Water Is Understanding Where Your Water Is Located—Oceans and IceLocated—Oceans and Ice

• What bodies of water hold the largest amount of water?– Oceans—the largest bodies of water on Earth

(contain salt water only)• Features housing water as ICE

– Icebergs: a large piece of freshwater ice floating in open waters. **approx. 85% of icebergs are under the surface of the water.

– Glaciers: any large mass of ice that moves slowly over land formed by snow falling and compressing layer upon layer.

– *permanent snow areas also “house” water as ice

Page 13: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

Fresh Water Locations—Surface Fresh Water Locations—Surface WaterWater

• What is the difference between a watershed and a river basin?– Both terms describe land that drains into a

river, stream or lake• River Basin: the term used to describe an

area that drains into a large river• Watershed: the term used to describe an

area that drains into a smaller river or stream

Page 14: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

Fresh Water Locations—River Fresh Water Locations—River Basins and WatershedsBasins and Watersheds

• Larger river basins are made up of many interconnected watersheds– Example: Cape Fear and Neuse River Basins

are made of many small watersheds

• The water in a watershed runs to the lowest point—a river, stream, lake, or ocean

Page 15: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

Fresh Water Locations—Rivers, Fresh Water Locations—Rivers, Streams, and LakesStreams, and Lakes

• What is a river?– A large channel along which water is continually

flowing down a slope—made of many streams that come together

• What is a stream?– A small channel along which water is continually

flowing down a slope—made of small gullies• What is a lake?

– A body of water of considerable size contained on a body of land

Page 16: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

Fresh Water Locations--GroundwaterFresh Water Locations--Groundwater

• What is groundwater?– The water found in cracks and pores in sand,

gravel and rocks below the earth’s surface

• What is an aquifer?– A porous rock layer underground that is a

reservoir for water

Page 17: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

What determines how far it What determines how far it goes?goes?

• Porosity: measure of a rock’s ability to hold a fluid.

• Permeability: a measure of the ease of flow of a fluid through a porous solid

Page 18: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

AquifersAquifers

• porous rock layer which is capable of yielding useful supplies of water

• layers of sand or fractured rock in which the pore spaces or fractures are filled with water

Page 19: Water Cycle. What is the water cycle? This is how water circulates through our environment Water changes from water to gas over and over again to complete.

Other Surface WatersOther Surface Waters

• What is a wetland?– An area where the water table is at, near or

above the land surface long enough during the year to support adapted plant growth

• What are the types of wetlands?– Swamps, bogs, and marshes

• Swamp: a wetland dominated by trees• Bogs: a wetland dominated by peat moss• Marshes: a wetland dominated by grasses