What is water that flows on Earth from high elevation to low elevation?
Runoff
What is water's chemical formula?
What is H2O
What is a wetland?
What is an area that is covered with water for some or all of the year
What is the water cycle?
The continuous process of water being evaporated and water coming back down to Earth's surface
What is an aquifer?
a layer underground that stores water for human use (crops and livestock)
What are tributaries?
The smaller streams and rivers that feed into a main river
What is surface tension?
The tightness across an area of water, usually allows for certain things to stay on top of water
What are the three types of wetlands?
Marshes, Bogs, Swamps
What is a collection of water?
A body of water. A pond, lake, ocean, etc
What are the three states of water?
Solid, liquid, gas
An area that supplies water to a major river system... mississippi river watershed
What is specific heat?
What is the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of a given substance by one degree
Where on Earth is the largest wetland found?
Florida Everglades
Where does the energy come from that drives the water cycle?
THE SUN
What is Eutrophication and provide an example
The process by which an abundance of nutrients is released into a pond and there is not enough plants, animals to take in all these nutrients and the body of water begins to dry up.
A farm pond slowly drying up over the course of ten years.
What are the percentages of water on Earth in fresh and saltwater?
97 salt, 3 fresh
What is capillary action?
The combined force of attraction among water molecules and with the molecules of surrounding materials
What do you typically find in each wetland?
How can you tell them apart?
Marshes- weeds and reeds surrounding a deeper pool of water, moderate climate
Bogs- found more north, peaty substance on top of water
Swamps- found in more warmer environments, very humid, tall trees grow throughout, Southern US
What is transpiration?
The process by which the water in leaves and trees is evaporated
What is the difference between permeable materials and impermeable materials?
Permeable allows water to flow through it (sand,gravel) while impermeable does not allow (bedrock, clay)
What two places on Earth do we find the majority of the freshwater?
Frozen Ice and Under Ground
Why does water have such high specific heat?
Because of the attraction among water molecules
What do wetlands do?
natural water filter, habitat for organisms, helps prevent floods
What is infiltration?
When water goes into the ground and is absorbed by all the surrounding vegetation and plants
How does water underground come to the surface?
Springs and Geysers