Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byCharleen Lane Modified over 9 years ago
2
Water Cycle The Hydrologic Cycle
4
I’ve got the power!
5
Evaporation Heat energy from the sun causes water in puddles, streams, rivers, seas, oceans or lakes to change from a liquid to water vapor (a gas). This is called evaporation. The vapor rises into the air and collects in clouds.
6
Transpiration Transpiration is the process by which plants lose water out of their leaves. Transpiration gives evaporation a bit of a hand in getting the water vapor back up into the air.
7
Condensation As water vapor rises and cools, it collects around dust particles (or condenses) and forms clouds. This is called condensation.
8
Precipitation When clouds are saturated gravity pulls the water to the earth. Mainly as rain, but sometimes as snow, sleet, and hail. This is called precipitation.
9
2 types of Run Off Surface run off: movement of water on Earth’s surface to collect in rivers, streams, lakes and oceans. Subsurface run off: movement of water beneath the Earth’s surface that eventually collects in aquifers and springs.
10
Accumulation a.k.a. collection Water collects in rivers, lakes, streams, and the ocean.
11
Evaporation The vapor rises Condensation The Clouds form Precipitation The rain falls Transpiration The movement through plants Accumulation
15
0.5 Consumable 0.5 Non- consumable
16
How is water distributed on the Earth? 97 % of the world’s Water supply is salt water (seas and oceans). 2 % of the world’s water supply is fresh and frozen in icecaps and glaciers.
17
How is water distributed on the Earth? 0.5 % of the world’s water supply is non-consumable water on land, water in atmosphere or dirty water 0.5% of the world’s water supply is freshwater available for consumption.(lakes, rivers, streams, groundwater)
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.