Global Hydro logical Cycle

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  • Created by: Iskall
  • Created on: 25-09-18 11:47
What percentage of water does freshwater make up of all water on earth?
2.5%
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According to NASA, how many times has every drop of water been consumed and why?
Once, because water flows through a closed hyrdrological cycle
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What does solar energy cause water to do?
Evaporate from both sea and land, which then returns as precipitation.
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Which two processes drive the global hydrological cycle?
Solar energy: In the form of heat Gravitational potential energy: Causes rivers to flow downhill and precipitation to fall to the ground.
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Levels of what increase in the atmosphere as evaporation increases?
Levels of moisture in the atmosphere increase.
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What can higher levels of moisture in the atmosphere cause?
Lead to increased condensation as air cools, and therefore greater precipitation. This explains why some places experience increased cloud cover and precipitation as climate changes.
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What are the four main stores of water?
The oceans Glaciers and ice sheets (cryosphere) Surface runoff Atmosphere
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What is the biggest store of water?
The ocean, followed by the cryosphere
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What is surface runoff in the context of the global hydro logical cycle?
Surface runoff is an umbrella term for a number of land-based stores. These are rivers, lakes, groundwater and the moisture held in soils and vegetation.
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What does surface runoff consist of?
Rivers and lakes, as well as groundwater.
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What is the largest freshwater store?
The cryosphere is the largest
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What percentage of the worlds freshwater is held in the cryosphere?
69%
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What percentage of the worlds freshwater is held in groundwater?
30%
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What percentage of the worlds freshwater is held in the biosphere (vegetation and soil moisture)?
Less than 1%
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What are flows?
Flows are the transfers of water from one store to another.
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What are the four main flows?
Precipitation, evaporation, transpiration and vapour transport.
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What are fluxes?
Fluxes are the rates of flow between stores.
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Where do the greatest fluxes occur?
Over the oceans
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What is groundwater?
Groundwater is the water contained within the soil and underlying rocks, and derived mainly from the percolation of rainwater and meltwater. It is a store, but water also moves through it, hence the term groundwater flow.
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Other cards in this set

Card 2

Front

Once, because water flows through a closed hyrdrological cycle

Back

According to NASA, how many times has every drop of water been consumed and why?

Card 3

Front

Evaporate from both sea and land, which then returns as precipitation.

Back

Preview of the back of card 3

Card 4

Front

Solar energy: In the form of heat Gravitational potential energy: Causes rivers to flow downhill and precipitation to fall to the ground.

Back

Preview of the back of card 4

Card 5

Front

Levels of moisture in the atmosphere increase.

Back

Preview of the back of card 5
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