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Unit 4 – Water Systems on Earth Chapter 10 – The water cycle plays a vital role on Earth. 10.1 Distribution of Water -water exists everywhere on Earth, covers 70% of its surface -97% of this water is found in oceans -another 2% is ice/snow, leaving only 1% as fresh water found in the ground, rivers, lakes, streams -finding freshwater to drink = challenge in many places, as most is underground *The Water Cycle* -Earth is only planet with all three states/phases -solid (in form of ice, snow, glaciers) -liquid (in form of oceans, lakes streams) -gas (in form of water vapour in atmosphere) -water cycle: the continual movement of water between oceans, land, atmosphere ☇occurs everywhere ☇water evaporates when warmed ☇condenses in the atmosphere as clouds ☇when cools, falls as precipitation ☇then runs off back to storage basins, or soaks into ground *solid liquid = melting *liquid gas = evaporation *gas liquid = condensation *liquid solid = solidification *solid gas = sublimation *gas solid = deposition -heat energy from Sun causes these changes to drive cycle -hydrologist: a scientist who studies Earth’s water systems and helps find solutions to problems related to water quality and quantity -oceanographer: a scientist who studies oceans specifically 1 10.2 How Ocean Water Differs from Fresh Water -salinity: the amount of salt dissolved in water -ocean water’s salinity = 200x greater than fresh water -average salinity of ocean is 35 parts per thousand (35‰) -oceans at equator (evaporation) and poles (ice) have highest salinity -equator – high rates of evaporation; when water in ocean transforms into vapour in air, leaves salt behind -poles – when water freezes and changes into ice, leaves salt behind ☇removing water increases salinity -oceans near rivers have low salinity, due to addition of fresh water *Composition of Salt Water* -salt water is composed of minerals dissolved during run-offs occurring over millions of years ☇run off: water that is not absorbed immediately by Earth’s surface but flows downhill over the land and buildings and into water bodies and sewers -volcanic eruptions also release minerals from inside Earth -sodium ions (Na+) and chloride ions (Cl-) are most common solids in ocean water -Na+ ions and Cl- ions add up to more than 85% of all the dissolved solids in the ocean -mixed and joined in the ocean, NaCl = sodium chloride (salt) *Density of Salt Water* -density of ocean water (kg/m3) = mass (kg)/volume (m3) -density: how tightly packed the molecules are in an object -less dense always floats on more dense; ex: warm air rises above cool -we float better in salt water than fresh water -ocean water-density=1027 kg/m3; fresh water-density=1000 kg/m3 *Freezing Point of Salt Water* -salt water has slightly different properties than fresh water -fresh water freezes: 0°C; salt water freezes: approx. -1.9°C -freezing point of salt is lower than freezing point of water – thus, salt in water lowers the freezing point of solution 2 10.3 Sources of Fresh Water -precipitation becomes run off as gravity pulls water down into groundwater, a lake or an ocean basin -gravity: the attractive force between objects; the force that causes objects to be pulled toward the centre of Earth *Factors Affecting Run-off* -run off increases if: -precipitation falls on rock, as soils allow water to soak in the nature of the ground material -heavy rainfall saturates the ground so water can’t soak in the amount of rain -long periods of rainfall saturate the ground so water can’t soak in the length of time it rains -water can flow quickly down a steep slope, not having time to soak in the slope of the land -there is no vegetation, as plants help to absorb water and hold soil with their root systems the amount of vegetation -there is human development and no soils the amount of development in the area -human development often alters run-off *Drainage Basins* -drainage basin: the area of land on which precipitation falls and drains into a common river; also called a watershed – similar to sink -run-off flows into streams and other rivers, which are tributaries of large rivers, forming a branching system -large rivers are separated by very high ground called divides ☇the Rocky Mountains form the Continental Divide, which divides BC and Alberta *Ground Water* -ground water: water that soaks into the ground -rock/ground with good porosity allows more water to enter -more pores (spaces in rock/soil), the better the porosity -aquifer: layer of porous rock that allows ground water to flow, almost like a river below the surface -humans get fresh water from: -reservoirs: large natural or artificial lakes or holding ponds used to collect and store water for human use 3 -wells, drilled into aquifers down to the water table, which is the top level of the zone of saturation -water table: in the ground, the level beneath which porous rocks are filled with water -very deep in deserts, but near the surface in swamps -rise during wet seasons *Glaciers* -almost 66% of all fresh water on Earth is in glaciers -glaciers form from layers of snow falling over many years -melt slowly under own weight, and slowly flow downhill -covers about 10% of the Earth’s surface -Alpine glaciers (aka valley) found in mountains -Continental glaciers (aka ice sheets) cover huge areas of land; ex: Greenland -glaciers flow until they: -reach an ocean, where crevasses open and icebergs fall of -crevasse: deep crack that forms in a glacier -iceberg: large chunk of ice that breaks off a glacier into ocean -reach an area where warm temps allow as much melting as re-freezing, or recede if they melt faster than they can freeze 10.4 Water’s Effect on Shaping Earth’s Surface -snow has helped shape the rock surface of BC -large sheets of moving ice can tear, scrape, and carry solid rock -water in its liquid and gas form is also constantly changing the landscape around you -these changes can happen quickly, or over thousands/millions of years *Weathering, Erosion, and Deposition* -weathering: the process of breaking down rock into smaller fragments -physical weathering: rocks are broken down by physical means -rocks being scratched to bits by harder rocks -chemical weathering: a chemical reaction causes rocks to break down -an upright gravestone gradually wearing away -biological weathering: caused by plants or animals -tree root breaking through rock -after rock becomes weakened and broken down, it can be carried away in the process of erosion -erosion: the transport of sediments from one place to another by agents such as water, glaciers, gravity, and wind 4 -deposition: process in which eroded sediments and other material are dropped and left by water/ice, creating built-up landforms such as deltas, eskers -sediments deposited in layers may eventually turn into solid sedimentary rock *Weathering by Water and Ice* -physical weathering is greatest in climates with a lot of moisture in the air, or rain and snow, and where there are large temperature differences between winter/summer -water in the cracks/pores freezes and expands, breaking the rock into pieces; called ice/frost wedging -chemical weathering is greatest in climates with high temperatures, a lot of rain, and high levels of pollution -water and oxygen can trigger chemical reactions that decompose minerals and rock -plants die and decompose, releasing chemicals that break down rocks -when rainwater mixes with carbon dioxide, the water droplets become acidic ☇when this water reaches ground, the acid dissolves carbonate rock -when ground water with carbonic calcium carbonate in their composition (‘carbonate rocks’), the result is like what happens when vinegar and baking soda mix – but without fizzing - gaps in the rock can create underground caves, sinkholes, karst -sinkhole: large circular depression in the ground caused by collapse of an underground cave -karst: an area with many sinkholes 5 *Erosion by Water and Ice* -two main transporters, or agents, of erosion are moving water and glaciers; they work closely with gravity -moving water can physically break down rock material into sediment -sediment is transported and deposited in large amounts elsewhere -rivers in mountainous or steep regions have high energy and carve deep valleys that look like letter V in cross section -rapids, where the water moves very quickly over exposed pieces of rock, can form in a steep and rocky river channel -ocean waves are also a powerful forces, eroding coastlines -landslides (a sudden, rapid movement of rock material down the slope of a hill/mountain) occur when rain soaks the slopes of steep hills and mountains -an avalanche is a landslide of ice and snow -glaciers have shaped much of our province’s landscapes -moving water and glaciers deposit the materials they pick up -as ice sheets are pulled slowly downhill by gravity, the scrape and carve the land they are passing over -striations: scratch marks cut into rock by glaciers slowly moving over -other features created by glaciers: ☇arête: narrow ridge (high ground) between two cirques ☇cirque: bowl-shaped valley at the head of a glacier ☇fiord: a narrow inlet of ocean between steep cliffs carved by glaciers ☇hanging valley: U-shaped valley cut off by a bigger valley created by a larger glacier ☇horn: pyramid-shaped peak located between three cirques *Deposition by Water and Ice* -delta: an area of built-up sediment deposited by a river where the river empties into a n ocean or lake -when fast-moving river water enters a body of water, it slows down and begins to drop the sediments’ it has carried downstream -pattern created by deposited sediments is usually triangular -glaciers deposits rock material when they melt -some notable glacier-deposited features: ☇erratic: large boulder deposited on the ground by a glacier ☇esker: winding ridge of material deposited by stream running under glacier ☇moraine: ridge of rocky material deposited by glacier; can be found at sides and farthest advance of a glacier ☇outwash: material deposited by water from melting glaciers 6 Chapter 11 – Oceans control the water cycle. 11.1 Ocean Basins -surface of ocean floor is as varied as the land -five major oceans, from largest to smallest: Pacific, Atlantic, India, Southern, Arctic -low points in ocean = basins -oceans are vital to life, as they control temperature, create weather patterns, and provide water for water cycles *The Origin of Ocean Water* -oceans have filled over hundreds of millions of years -scientists believe that oceans are more than 3 billion years old -water may have originally been released from volcanic eruptions, or arrived on Earth via icy comets -water trapped inside volcanic materials released into atmosphere, water vapour; like steam escaping from kettle -water vapour cooled/condensed, fell to Earth’s surface -precipitation -gravity cause water to flow downhill, so vast amounts of water that fell began collecting in lowest parts of Earth’s surface – ocean basins *Features of the Ocean Floor* -although the word ‘basin’ sounds flat, many features found on land, mountain ranges, valleys, flat plains, canyons, and volcanoes also exist on ocean floor -ocean basin: deep, wide depressions in Earth’s surface that contain oceans -continental margins: the part of continents that lies under ocean and includes the continental shelf, the continental slope, and the continental rise ☇Ocean Basins -largest changes to ocean basin occur through movement of tectonic plates, although there is also erosion via storms, earthquakes, icebergs -greatest influence in shaping ocean floor is result of tectonic processes -tectonic processes: the movements of Earth’s tectonic plates (crust/upper mantle broken into large rock slabs) as the float over Earth’s molten layer -magma heats up from heat energy in Earth’s core; molten rock rises; this pressure forces two places apart -two types of tectonic plates: oceanic/continental; oceanic denser -mid-ocean ridge 7 Ocean Basins • The largest changes to the ocean basin occur through the movement of tectonic plates, although there is also erosion via storms, earthquakes and icebergs. • Mid-ocean ridges occur where new rock is forced up, and ocean floor spreads outward. The Mid-Atlantic Ridge is the largest example on Earth The Juan de Fuca plate lies 200 km off Vancouver Island • A trench forms when the dense oceanic plates run into, and slide under, the continental plates. See pages 406 - 407 (c) McGraw Hill Ryerson 2007 8