The process where the sun's heat brings water to rise into the air.
Evaporation
This organism makes their own food.
Producer
This biome is defined by it's low rainfall. However, plants can grow (such as cacti) to conserve water.
Desert
This is the study of celestial objects, space, and the physical universe.
Astronomy
This magnifies tiny specimens, like germs or bacteria.
Water falls to the earth in the form of rain, sleet, snow, or hail.
This organism eats producers and are considered herbivores (rabbits or caterpillars).
primary consumers
This biome is considered the "lungs of the earth" providing most of the world's oxygen.
Rainforest
This constellation is also called "The Hunter".
Orion
This tool "magnifies" objects like minerals and plant veins.
This measures temperature of liquid, gas, and solids.
This is the percentage of water on our planet that is fresh.
3%.
This animal eats primary consumers, they are carnivores or omnivores.
Secondary consumers
Arctic
This is formed when 7 bright stars form a bowl and handle.
The big dipper.
This measures temperature of liquid, gases, and solids.
Thermometer
When gas cools liquid to turn it into water or ice.
Condensation
This animal eats primary consumers, an eagle or a wolf is a great example.
Secondary consumers
Jaguars and the Kapok tree inhabit this biome, where "the lion sleeps tonight".
The jungle
This "not major" constellation can be seen all year around, famous for housing the big dipper.
Ursa Minor.
This is an optical instrument used to observe distant objects in the sky by gathering and focusing in on electromagnetic radiation.
Telescope
This is water from rain, snowmelt, and other sources that flows in land, streams, and rivers.
This is an interconnected number of food chains in a single ecosystem.
Food Web
This largest biome takes up 75% of the earth.
The ocean
Named for a mythological sea creature, this is the largest constellation.
Hydra
This is a tool to detect vibration during earthquakes, volcanic eruption, and explosions.
Seismograph