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How are lakes and streams similar? How are they different?
Do Now 11/3/2009 How are lakes and streams similar? How are they different? How do people use lakes? What are some ways lakes are formed?
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Lakes
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How does water enter into lakes?
Rainfall (Precipitation) Runoff- The water that does not sink into the ground, yet flows along the surface.
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How do lakes form? Glaciers: Glaciers scoured out depressions that over time fill in with runoff water. Natural Lakes: Ex. Great Lakes- They hold 18 percent of Earth’s freshwater. Crustal Movement: The Earth’s crust can move and create depressions that fill in with water. Volcanic Eruption: After a volcanic eruption the top of the volcano can fill with water. Caldera: Formation of a dam: Human-made lake Ex. Hoover dam
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What is found in lakes? Plant Life: Plant life near a lake is usually found near the shallow parts. Why? Because, plants need sunlight to live and produce. Amphibians: Organisms that use both the land and the water. Ex. Frogs, Ducks, Turtles, etc. Fish Plankton: small organisms found near the surface of the water. Sediment and Nutrients: Nutrients: Compounds such as nitrates and phosphates that are used by plants and algae to grow. Sediment: Can a lake be the same depth forever? No, sediment will build and over time the lake will decrease in depth. Eventually becoming dry.
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Lake Math Bay depth: A small bay in a large lake is filling at a rate of 0.01 cm per year. If the water in the bay averages 100 cm deep, how long will it take for the bay to become land. Solution: This is what you know: Infill rate- r= 0.01 cm/y Average depth- d= 100 com What you need to find: Time: t This is the procedure you need to use: time= depth / infill rate Solve: Time= 100cm / 0.01cm/y = 1000 years Practice: A different bay in the same lake is filling at a rate of 0.3 cm/y. This bay averages 150 cm deep. How long will it take to fill in?
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How does a lake turnover?
Turnover- The mixing of lake water, which causes nutrients from deep in the lake to move to the surface. Summer Lake: Nutrients are concentrated on the bottom with the more dense colder water. Low nutrient count on top with the less dense water . There is a separation of nutrients due to water density. Autumn Lake: The top layer of water becomes colder and more dense. The top layer sinks and mixes with the nutrient rich water from the bottom. * Turnover causes nutrients from deep in the lake to move upward toward the surface.
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Vocabulary Nutrient Eutrophication Turnover
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