exam 2 2.5 pt improvement over 1 st exam (better than past) 150 (63%) improved over the first exam
TRANSCRIPT
Exam 2
• 2.5 pt improvement over 1st exam (better than past)
• 150 (63%) improved over the first exam
Distribution of Earth’s WaterThe Earth has 1.36 billion km3 of water.
The water occurs in one of three states:
1.Liquid
2.Solid
3.Gas
And is stored in one of the
following major reservoirs
1.Oceans
2.Atmosphere
3.Rivers/lakes
4.Groundwater
5.Glaciers
Changes of state and energy transfers
Release of Energy
• Gas to solid
• Gas to liquid
• Liquid to solid
Requires Energy
(storage)
• Solid to gas
• Solid to liquid
• Liquid to Gas
Daily Question
The hydrologic cycle describes the movement of water among the different reservoirs. Using the terms on the right (which represent both reservoirs and pathways) create a conceptual model that identifies that pathways that connect the reservoirs.
1. Ocean
2. Ground water
3. Atmosphere
4. Glaciers
5. Surface Water
6. Precipitation
7. Evaporation
8. Evapotranspiration
9. Infiltration
10. Ground water flow
11. Runoff
Hydrologic System
• Hydrologic cycle – transfer of water between reservoirs.
Solar energy drives the hydrologic cycle.
• Evaporation – process by which water is transferred from the land and water masses of the earth to the atmosphere.
• Transpiration – transfer of water from plants to the atmosphere, soil moisture taken up by vegetation is eventually evaporated as it exits plant pores.
• Evapotranspiration – combination of evaporation and transpiration.
Conditions for Precipitation
• Cooling of the air mass• Condensation – phase change from gas to liquid
– Requires condensation nuclei: small particle of dust, previously formed ice or water drop, salt from ocean, clays, nitrogen oxides, etc.
• Coalescence of water particles to form drops• Growth of drops until gravity is able to bring to
Earth’s surface without evaporating first
Hydrologic Cycle• Precipitation – 4.2 trillion gallons per day
– 66% is lost as evapotranspiration– 31% is runoffrunoff– 3% infiltrates into the subsurface
Infiltration and Ground water flow
• Infiltration - the movement of water from the surface to subsurface– Could be from surface water reservoirs– Could follow rain event
• Ground water flow is the movement of water in the subsurface– Can move back to surface water reservoir– Can move to the ocean
Runoff• The collective term describing the movement of water on the
Earth’s surface, (primarily stream transport)• Factors affecting runoff
– Geology - is it soil, unconsolidated material, or bedrock. Is it fractured? Is it porous?
– Slope - a high angle of slope increases runoff– Vegetation covering - the more vegetation the less runoff– Time of the year - frozen ground vs. non-frozen ground, lower
evapotranspiration vs. high evapotranspiration– Soil Saturation - if the soil is saturated there is no room for water to
infiltrate– Type of precipitation - fast, hard rain increases runoff, slow soft rains
allow for infiltration, snow vs. rain