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Chapter 11 Water
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Two kinds Salt water Freshwater We can only live a few days without water, but we can live a month without food
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The water cycle Continuous movement of water between earth and its atmosphere Is water a renewable resource?
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Global water distribution What percent of earth is covered by water? About two thirds, or more specifically 71% What percentage of that water is salt water? 97% So 3% of water on earth is fresh water Most of this is ICE (77%) A lot is GROUNDWATER (22%) Less than 1% is SURFACE WATER (that we can drink)!
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Water Mr. Turri
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Fresh water on Earth’s land surface Remember we said less than 1% of Earth’s water is surface water! Sources of fresh water in the form of surface water include : Rivers Streams Lakes Surface water
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A flowing network of rivers and streams draining a river basin Other rivers and streams flow into other rivers and streams…making a larger river. River systems
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Mississippi River System
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The area of land that is drained by a river Biggest in the US in the Mississippi Watersheds
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Most of the freshwater available for human use cannot be seen – it exists underground When it rains some water goes into the streams and rivers, but most of it percolates down through the soil and into the rocks below This water is called groundwater Groundwater
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As you travel down through the earths surface, eventually you reach a point where the soil is saturated with water, this is the water table. The water table
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CHAPTER 11 Water
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Water management Aqueduct – huge channels that move water from one place to another Often used when natural water distribution isn't enough
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Dams - a structure built to control the flow of water Reservoir – an artificial lake that will form behind the dam
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Conservation Agriculture Drip irrigation system: deliver water directly to plant roots Industry – recycling of used water Residential – change habits/technology
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Future solutions Desalination – The process of removing salt form salt water Pros? Cons? Transporting water Bags Icebergs
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Water T-Russ Trying to Douglas
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Water Pollution Introduction of chemical, physical, or biological agents that degrade water quality Adversely affect the organisms that depend on water
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Point source pollution Pollution from a single source
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Non-point source Comes from many different sources that are often difficult to identify
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Wastewater Water that contains waste from homes or industry
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Artificial Eutrophication Nutrients are good for water….but… TOO much can be bad: When nutrients break down or decompose, they use up oxygen. Fertilizers cause excess phosphorus and nitrogen to enter surface water through sewage or runoff.
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Eutrophication
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Thermal Pollution Did you ever think warmth can be a pollutant? It can, if a body of water rises just a few degrees, large amount of fish can die. Like eutrophication, thermal pollution causes decreased levels of oxygen in water, cold water holds more oxygen.
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Groundwater Pollution Groundwater can get polluted through Pesticide Herbicide Petroleum products Very difficult to clean
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Ocean Pollution Most of the pollution that occurs in the ocean comes from ACTIVITIES ON LAND. Oil spills
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How do we clean up oil spills? Booms: Barriers to prevent the oil from spreading Dispersants: chemicals that break up the oil so that it is diluted by more water Pros/cons Skimmers: remove oil from the surface of water Burning
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Ecosystem Biomagnification – buildup of pollutants at higher levels of the food chain
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Cleaning up Cuyahoga River Clean Water Act of 1972 – Goal was to make all surface water clean enough to swim and fish in by ’83. Not met, but 30% increase Clean Air Act of 1990 – requires oil tankers traveling US water to have double hulls
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