Infinite Water Glitch
Why Are You So Salty?
Climate's Villain Arc
Smooth Operator
Absolute Units
100

This term encompasses all of the water on Earth, including what is found in the atmosphere and the lithosphere.

What is the hydrosphere?

100

Often triggered by an earthquake or landslide on the ocean floor, this is a giant wave that can travel great distances.

What is a Tsunami?

100

Winds that blow east to west near the equator and can shorten a westward sea journey.

What are trade winds?

100

The state of matter that has a specific volume, but its shape is determined by its container.

What is liquid?

100

Ideally suited for a rock or a crown rather than a cube, this technique determines volume by noting how much water an irregularly shaped object takes the place of.

What is displacement?

200

Water that does not evaporate or soak into the ground, but instead flows across the Earth's surface, is known as this.

What is runoff?

200

These parts of the coastline project farther out into the ocean than the land next to them, often creating a protective barrier for bays.

What are Headlands?

200

The averaged long-term conditions of a specific area.

What is climate?

200

This core principle of the particle theory states that heating matter causes the particles to do this.

What is move faster (or increase their kinetic energy)?

200

Because ice has less of this property than liquid water, ice cubes will float in your drink.

What is density?

300

This measurement refers specifically to the amount of salt dissolved in a set amount of water.

What is salinity?

300

This specific type of tide creates the largest tidal movements and occurs when the Earth, Moon, and Sun are all lined up.

What is a Spring Tide?

300

The process of heat transfer in air that creates weather patterns over large areas of Earth.

What is convention current? 

300

Change that can be made in a maple syrup factory when the syrup is overfilling bottles.

What is decrease the temperature of the factory?

300

The equation used to calculate mass of a substance, if given volume and density.

What is m = D x V?

400

During the Ice Age, when average temperatures hovered near 10°C, these covered the land from the Arctic as far south as the Great Lakes.

What are glaciers?

400

This feature is the submerged part of the continent between the coast and the edge of the basin; it is relatively shallow compared to the open ocean.

What is the Continental Shelf?

400

The weather pattern that causes heavy rains in Australia, Africa, and South America, and marine life to flourish due to upwelling (vertical movement of ocean water).

What is La Nina?

400

If your milkshake has such high viscosity that it won't go up the straw, you can fix it by adding milk to lower this of the ice cream solids.

What is concentration?

400

The measurement given when you stand on a scale.

What is weight?

500

Scientists use this specific tool to assess water quality and ecosystem health by analyzing the types and abundance of organisms living there.

What is the biotic index?

500

Found in the wide open regions between continents and mountain ranges, these are the flat, expansive areas of the ocean floor.

What is the Abyssal Plain?

500

The natural disasters caused by El Niño.

What are droughts, fires, severe storms and flooding?

500

According to particle theory, fluids like molasses or corn syrup flow slowly because their particles have strong _____ and _____, resulting in a high measure of ________.

What is attraction, friction and viscosity?

500

When you heat a substance, its particles ______ kinetic energy and move ______, therefore, _____ the volume and ____ the density.

What is gain, apart, increasing, and decreasing?