Water Cycle Powerpoint
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Transcript Water Cycle Powerpoint
Are you really drinking the same water as the caveman?
Water Cycle
Water is always on the move.
Rain falling where you live may
have been water in the ocean
just days before. And the water
you see in a river or stream
may have been snow on a high
mountaintop.
The water cycle is also known
as the hydrologic cycle.
Fun Fact:
Hydro is Latin for water
Where is water?
Water can be in the
atmosphere, on the land, in
the ocean, and even
underground. It is recycled
over and over through the
water cycle.
In the cycle, water changes
state between liquid, solid
(ice), and gas (water vapor).
Stage 1 : Evaporation
Evaporation is the change
from liquid to vapor form.
Evaporation turns the
water that is on the
surface of oceans, rivers,
& lakes into water vapor
using energy from the
sun.
What type of energy
transfer is taking place?
Stage 1 : Transpiration
When water evaporates
from plants it is a process
called transpiration.
Plants lose water through
their stems, leaves, and
roots.
A fully grown tree may lose
several hundred gallons of
water through its leaves on a
hot, dry day.
Stage 2: Condensation
Condensation is the process by
which water vapor in the air is
changed into liquid water.
The water vapor rises in the
atmosphere and cools, forming
tiny water droplets by a process
called condensation.
Those water droplets make up
clouds.
Stage 3: Precipitation
Those water droplets that CONDENSE make up
clouds. If those tiny water droplets combine with
each other they grow larger and eventually
become too heavy to stay in the air. Then they fall
to the ground as rain, snow, and other types of
precipitation.
Stage 3: Precipitation
Precipitation is water
released from clouds
in the form of rain,
freezing rain, sleet,
snow, or hail. It is the
primary way water is
delivered from the
atmosphere to the
Earth.
Did you know…
How many gallons of water fall when 1 inch (2.5 cm) of
rain falls on 1 acre of land?
27,154 gallons of water!
Rain drops are not tear shaped.
They start out in a ball shape, but as they fall they meet with air
resistance, which starts to flatten out the drop until at about 2-3
mm in diameter the bottom is quite flat with an indention in the
middle - much like a hamburger bun. When raindrops reach about
4-5 mm, things really fall apart. At this size, the indentation in the
bottom greatly expands forming something like a parachute with
two smaller droplets at the bottoms. The parachute doesn't last
long, though, and the large drop breaks up into smaller drops.
Wow! That is amazing!
The world's record for average-annual rainfall belongs
to Mt. Waialeale, Hawaii, where it averages about 450
inches (38 ft) per year.
The world’s recorded for least amount of rain goes to
Antofagasta Region, Atacama Desert, Chile at 0 in one
year!
It takes 6 gallons of water to grow the potatoes for your
order of fries!
For your hamburger it takes 1300 gallons of water to
produce everything needed!
Stage 4: Runoff
The variety of ways by
which water moves
across the land.
As it flows, the water
may seep into the
ground, evaporate into
the air, become stored in
lakes or reservoirs, or be
extracted for agricultural
or other human uses.
Stage 4: Infiltration
Some of the
precipitation seeps into
the ground and becomes
a part of the
groundwater.
That seepage is called
infiltration.
Stage 5: Accumulation
The process in which water pools
in large bodies (like oceans, seas
and lakes) Most of the water on
Earth is in the Ocean.
Did you know?
Water stays in certain places longer
than others. A drop of water may
spend over 3,000 years in the ocean
before moving on to another part of
the water cycle while a drop of water
spends an average of just eight days
in the atmosphere before falling
back to Earth.