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Water in our World.

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Presentation on theme: "Water in our World."— Presentation transcript:

1 Water in our World

2 Water Facts… There is the same amount of water on Earth as there was when the Earth was formed. The water from your faucet could contain molecules that dinosaurs drank. Water is composed of two elements, Hydrogen and Oxygen. 2 Hydrogen + 1 Oxygen = H2O. Nearly 97% of the world’s water is salty or otherwise undrinkable. Another 2% is locked in ice caps and glaciers. That leaves just 1% for all of humanity’s needs — all its agricultural, residential, manufacturing, community, and personal needs. Water regulates the Earth’s temperature. It also regulates the temperature of the human body, carries nutrients and oxygen to cells, cushions joints, protects organs and tissues, and removes wastes.

3 Water Facts continued…
75% of the human brain is water and 75% of a living tree is water. A person can live about a month without food, but only about a week without water. Water is part of a deeply interconnected system. What we pour on the ground ends up in our water, and what we spew into the sky ends up in our water. The average total home water use for each person in the U.S. is about 50 gallons a day. The average cost for water supplied to a home in the U.S. is about $2.00 for 1,000 gallons, which equals about 5 gallons for a penny. Water expands by 9% when it freezes. Frozen water (ice) is lighter than water, which is why ice floats in water.

4 Water Filtration & Watersheds
sh_filtration.html dex.html

5 The Hydrosphere (layer of H2O)
Fresh Water- ponds, rivers, lakes, streams (does not have salt) 3% of Earth’s H20 Less than 1% is available for human consumption   Saltwater- Makes up 97% of Earth’s water, can remove salt through Desalination   Erosion- soil and sediment are moved by rivers, wind, snow, ice, etc. Grand Canyon is a good example Water Cycle- continuous flow of water Condensation, precipitation, percolation, runoff, transpiration, storage, and evaporation

6 Water Cycle Intro (video)
sh_watercycle.html

7 The Water Cycle Condensation -forms precipitation in clouds, gas-> liquid) Precipitation -rain, ice, snow, hail Percolation -water moves down in soil)/Infiltration Runoff -not absorbed->flows in streams over land) Storage -(water stored in oceans, lakes, etc.) Transpiration-water moves through plants, leads to droplets on leaves Evaporation (absorbed back to clouds, change liquid to gas)

8 Water Cycle Info http://water.usgs.gov/edu/watercycleoc eans.html
kids.html

9 The Water cycle

10 Vocabulary Tributary- water flows into something larger (river, ocean)
Watershed –drainage basin (land where water is drained) Load- deposits carried by water Deposition- sediment dropped in river basin or floor Delta- triangular shaped area where sand deposits Flood plain- area that easily floods (Louisiana, Collettsville) Water table -able to measure water levels (rises in wet season, drops in dry season)

11 Vocabulary Aquifer-rocky layer that holds water underground (Castle Hayne largest in NC) Porosity- (have pores) ability to hold water (like a sponge) Permeability-ability to let water move through rock, Impermeable (rocks that stop the flow) Artesian spring- water that flows from a crack in a rock Point-source pollution- comes from a specific place or site (can be controlled or cleaned) Non-point-source pollution- pollution from many sources (hard to clean up, most common) pH- amount of acid or base in a liquid (water is around 7, healthy is ) Turbidity- amount of particles in water (silt, plankton, waste)  turbidity, visibility

12 Concerns er/bloopers.cfm

13 Resources ent-resources/water-related-education- materials-for-high-school/ s.html


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