The Water Cycle
Earth's Spheres
Interactions
Weather and Climate
The Carbon Cycle
100

What process turns liquid water into water vapour?

Evaporation

100

Name the four main spheres of the Earth system.

Atmosphere, Hydrosphere, Biosphere, Geosphere

100

When rain causes erosion of rocks, which two spheres are interacting?

Hydrosphere and Geosphere

100

What is the difference between weather and climate?

Weather is short-term conditions; climate is long-term patterns.

100

What gas do plants take in during photosynthesis?

Carbon dioxide (CO₂)

200

What is it called when water vapour turns back into liquid droplets in the atmosphere as clouds?

Condensation

200

Which sphere contains all living organisms?

Biosphere

200

A volcanic eruption releases gases into the air. Which spheres interact here?

Geosphere and Atmosphere

200

What is a natural factor that influences Earth’s climate?

1. Uneven heating of Earth's surface by the sun

2. Heat absorption and emission rates (land vs water)

3. Earth's axis tilt

4. Topography

5. Composition of the atmosphere

200

What is a carbon source?

Something that releases more carbon into the atmosphere than it absorbs (e.g. volcanoes, animals, fossil fuels)

300

What part of the water cycle occurs when rain, snow, or hail falls to Earth?

Precipitation

300

What is the sphere made up of rocks, soil, and the Earth’s interior called?

Geosphere

300

How does the hydrosphere interact with the atmosphere in the formation of clouds?

Water from the hydrosphere evaporates and condenses in the atmosphere to form clouds.

300

What causes different seasons on Earth?

Earth's axis tilt

300

What is a carbon sink?

Something that absorbs more carbon than it releases into the atmosphere (e.g. ocean, trees, soil)

400

How does the Sun drive the water cycle?

It provides energy that causes evaporation and powers movement of water through the system.

400

Name 3 different places on Earth that you will find water as a:

1. Solid

2. Liquid

3. Gas

1. Polar ice caps, glaciers, snow

2. Oceans, rivers, lakes, groundwater

3. Atmosphere, clouds (early formation)

400

Why is it useful for scientists to study Earth as a system of interconnected spheres rather than separate parts?

Because changes in one sphere affect others—understanding connections helps predict and manage environmental changes.

400

How does the ocean help regulate global climate?

It absorbs and redistributes heat through ocean currents.

400

How is carbon stored in the geosphere?

In fossil fuels, rocks, and sediments.

500

Explain how deforestation can affect the water cycle.

It reduces transpiration and disrupts local rainfall patterns by lowering moisture returned to the atmosphere.

500

What are the layers of the atmosphere?

Troposphere

Stratosphere

Mesosphere

Thermosphere

Exosphere

500

Describe an example of how human activity can trigger interactions between multiple spheres.  

Example: Burning fossil fuels (biosphere/geosphere) releases gases into the atmosphere, affecting the hydrosphere and climate.  

500

How could changes in global wind or ocean patterns impact ecosystems?

They could shift rainfall, temperature, and food availability, disrupting habitats and biodiversity.

500

Explain how the carbon cycle links the biosphere, atmosphere, and hydrosphere.

Carbon moves between living things (biosphere), air (atmosphere), and oceans (hydrosphere) through photosynthesis, respiration (e.g. breathing), and absorption.

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