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Published byDaniela Richards Modified over 6 years ago
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EARTH’S WATERS: 1.2: Fresh Water Flows and Freezes on Earth
Divide: A ridge or continuous line of high land, from which water flows in different directions. Drainage basin: (or watershed) is an area into which all of the water on one side of the divide flows.
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When it rains in a drainage basin, the water forms streams and rivers or sinks into the ground.
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Surface Water Collects in Ponds and Lakes
Lakes and ponds form where water naturally collects in low parts of land. Water can fill a lake in a couple of ways: When land is below the level of underground water, the low land fills with water. Can come from a stream or river, and can leave from a lake by a stream or river.
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Lake Turnover Turnover: The rising and sinking of cold and warm layers in a lake. Turnovers occur twice a year as the seasons change. The water in a lake is not as still as it appears. The changing temperatures of the seasons affect the water and cause it to move within the lake in a yearly cycle.
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Eutrophication Eutrophication: An increase of nutrients in a lake or pond where the pond/lake becomes a meadow. A lake does not remain a lake forever. Through natural processes, (thousands of years) most lakes become meadows, fields, grass, etc. The activity of the life of a lake is based on nutrient levels (eutrophication).
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FROZEN WATER 2/3 of the Earth’s fresh water is frozen land near the poles. Glacier: Large mass of ice and snow that moves over land. Two types of glaciers: (1) continental glaciers (cover huge land masses), (2) valley glaciers (in mountains)
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ICEBERGS Iceberg: A mass of ice floating in the ocean.
Icebergs as tall as 150 ft. above sea level have been found (only about 1/8 can be seen above the surface!) Most of the floating icebergs are below the water’s surface. Water in an iceberg may have been frozen for 15,000 years.
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