What is the continuous movement of water on Earth?
What is the water cycle?
What is the most important substance on earth?
What is water?
How much water covers the earth?
Around 71 Percent
How do you separate salt from water?
What is applied heat to evaporate the water that separate the salt?
What does Bio Mean?
What is Life?
The introduction of harmful materials into the environment is called?
What is Pollution?
When air cannot hold more water it begin to release. This causes rain, snow, sleet or hail. What is the name of this stage in the water cycle?
What is Precipitation?
How many oceans are in the world?
What is 7?
If 97.5% is saltwater, what percentage is freshwater?
What is 2.5%?
What does Geo Mean?
What is Earth?
A series of events or processes that repeats is called?
What is a cycle?
Explain how the water cycle begins and ends.
The water cycle doesn't have a beginning nor end process.
What was the city and state that has a water crisis that led to a young boy to be expose to lead?
What is Flint Michigan?
The closer the ocean is to the equator, the _________ it becomes.
What is Warmer?
What does Hydro mean?
What is Water?
The process of changing liquid water into water vapor is known as?
What is Evaporation?
How many oxygen and hydrogen atoms are in water?
What is 2 hydrogen and 1 Oxygen?
What is a slowly moving body of ice on land called?
What is a Glacier?
Ocean water are also moved by what?
What are tides?
What are the four factors that affect the water cycle?
What is air pressure, air temperature, Landform and wind?
Waterfalls are example of what stage of the water cycle?
What is runoff?
In cold air, water vapor condenses into liquid water, or ice crystals. What is this called?
What is condensation?
If more than half of Earth is covered with water, why is freshwater so limited?
Because most of the freshwater is tied up in glaciers and ice caps.
Which two stages in the water cycle is the ocean connected to all of Earth's water ?
What is Precipitation and Evaporation?
What is the three states of water?
What is Liquid, Solid and Vapor?