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Water, Water Everywhere

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Presentation on theme: "Water, Water Everywhere"— Presentation transcript:

1 Water, Water Everywhere
The Water Cycle Water, Water Everywhere

2 What is the Water Cycle? The earth has a limited amount of water.  That water keeps going around and around and around and around in what we call the "Water Cycle". It is powered by solar energy, and aided by gravity. The water cycle includes all the processes that shift water—both those that physically move water, and those that convert water between solid, liquid, and gaseous states. This cycle is made up of a few main parts: evaporation (and transpiration) condensation precipitation collection

3 Where does the water cycle get energy to keep going?
  There is the same amount of water on the Earth now as there was when the Earth began.  The water cycle is how the earth's water recycles itself.   Earth's water keeps changing from liquid water to vapor and then back again.  This cycle happens because of the sun's heat and gravity.

4 What does the sun provide during the water cycle?
The sun is what makes the water cycle work. Wherever the sun shines on the ocean, evaporation creates fresh water vapor out of salty seawater. Winds lift the moist air high into the atmosphere, and blow it about the globe. As air moves away from the warm ocean it starts to cool off. With sufficient cooling, water vapor changes into drops of liquid water— a process called condensation The sun provides what almost everything on Earth needs to go—energy, or heat. Heat causes liquid and frozen water to evaporate into water vapor gas, which rises high in the sky to form clouds...clouds that move over the globe and drop rain and snow. This process is a large part of the water cycle.

5 Where is the water? The cycle also contains many reservoirs, where water accumulates. The great majority of water—more than 97%—lies in the oceans. Just over 2% is frozen in glaciers and ice caps. The rest—a meager half percent or so—is divided between the atmosphere, lakes and streams, and the ground.

6 What is evaporation in the water cycle?
Wherever the sun shines on the ocean, evaporation creates fresh water vapor out of salty seawater. Evaporation is when the sun heats up water in rivers or lakes or the ocean and turns it into vapor or steam.  The water vapor or steam leaves the river, lake or ocean and goes into the air.

7 What is transpiration during the water cycle?
Water even evaporates from plants. This is called transpiration. Plants, such as trees, lose water out of their leaves after they have absorbed water from the ground. Transpiration helps keep plants cool in the same way that perspiration keeps animals, such as humans, cool. The rate at which water will evaporate or transpire from plants depends on the temperature, wind, and humidity.

8 What is condensation during the water cycle?
Water vapor in the air gets cold and changes back into liquid, forming clouds. This is called condensation.  Pour a glass of cold water on a hot day and watch what happens.  Water forms on the outside of the glass.  That water didn't somehow leak through the glass!  It actually came from the air.  Water vapor in the warm air, turns back into liquid when it touches the cold glass.

9 Evaporation Wherever the sun shines on the ocean, evaporation creates fresh water vapor out of salty seawater. Winds lift the moist air high into the atmosphere, and blow it about the globe. As air moves away from the warm ocean it starts to cool off. With sufficient cooling, water vapor changes into drops of liquid water— a process called condensation.

10 What is precipitation during the water cycle?
Precipitation occurs when so much water has condensed that the air cannot hold it anymore.  The clouds get heavy and water falls back to the earth in the form of rain, hail, sleet or snow.

11 Precipitation With continued condensation, tiny drops of water grow bigger and bigger and gather into clouds. The average airborne water molecule stays aloft for only 10 days or so, until it joins a water droplet heavy enough to fall from the sky. Most precipitation, be it rain, snow, sleet, or hail, drops right back into the ocean. There, the water circulates until evaporation claims it once again.

12 What is percolation during the water cycle?
 The last step is percolation. Percolation is when the water on the surface of the Earth seeps down underground. It later forms aquifers in the low lying regions.

13 What is runoff in the water cycle?
Runoff is the overflow of water from the land and into a body of water. The water can overflow into a stream, a river, or even an ocean. It's caused when the soil can no longer hold any more water.

14 Runoff When ice and snow melt, or rain falls on land, water is pulled swiftly downhill by gravity. Some of it flows across the top of the ground, a process called runoff. Surface water gathers into rivers pauses for a time in lakes, and rushes down to the sea. As it flows across the ground, running water cuts into the earth, wearing down and reshaping the ground. Moving water is the most powerful geologic force sculpting the landscape.

15 Groundwater Precipitation actually infiltrates, or soaks into, the earth than runs off. More than 95% of the planet’s liquid fresh water is groundwater— water held within the ground. Some shallow groundwater doesn’t last long. Evaporation directly from the soil, and transpiration through plants, both transfer moisture back to the air. The process of transpiration is part of plant metabolism. Liquid water is absorbed by roots, and lifted to the leaves, where it is converted to vapor and lost to the sky.

16 Transpiration The process of transpiration is part of plant metabolism. Liquid water is absorbed by roots, and lifted to the leaves, where it is converted to vapor and lost to the sky.

17 How are evaporation and condensation similar and different?
Both are changes in heat energy and are parts of the water cycle Different evaporation is the process by which water changes to gas but condensation is the process by which gas changes into water.

18 Global Impact The water cycle is the most fundamental system operating on the surface of the earth. The varied processes of the water cycle control the global climate, shape the landscape, and allow life to exist. Evaporation powers vast weather systems like hurricanes and cyclones, while uneven precipitation nourishes rainforests or parches deserts. Other weather events, such as floods, droughts, and blizzards, are all aspects of the water cycle. Runoff is unequalled in its ability to erode rock and soil, and reshape the face of the land. Mountains are worn low and canyons are carved deep, grain-by-grain from the relentless force of moving water. For mankind, perhaps the most immediate impact of the water cycle is its influence on the quantity and quality of fresh water. Because of the unequal distribution of water around the cycle, fresh water is relatively scarce—only 0.65% of Earth's total water supply is neither salty nor frozen. As groundwater infiltrates through the soil, it gathers up both mineral compounds and buried toxic chemicals.


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