Absorbing heat, storing it and releasing it slowly
Clouds reflect 1/5 of solar radiation - lowers temperature (albedo effect)
Water vapour absorbs long-wave radiation from the Earth - helps maintain global temps 15*C higher than would be
How do flora use water?
Manufacture own food so need water for: photosynthesis (combining CO2, sunlight & water = glucose and starches); respiration (converts glucose to energy through reaction with oxygen- release CO2 & water)
Maintain rigidity- wilt when run out of water
Transport mineral nutrients from the soil
Cooling- transpiration of water from leaf surface cools plants by evaporation
How do fauna use water?
Water= the medium for all chemical reactions - i.e. circulation oxygen and nutrients
Evaporative cooling achieved through panting
How do humans use water?
Water = the medium for all chemical reactions - i.e. circulation of oxygen and nutrients
Cooling - sweating
Economic activity- generate electricity, irrigate crops, provide recreational facilities, satisfy public demand (drinking water, sewage disposal), industry (food manufacturing, brewing, steel making)
How is carbon stored?
Carbonate rocks (limestone)
Sea floor sediments
Ocean water (as dissolved CO2)
Atmosphere (CO2 gas)
Biosphere
How is life carbon based?
Built on large molecules of carbon - proteins, carbohydrates, nucleic acids
How can carbon be used as an economic resource?
Fossil fuels (coal, oil, natural gas) power the global economy
Oil is used as a raw material in manufacturing of products (from plastics to paint and synthetic fabrics)
Agricultural crops and forest trees store large amounts of carbon available for human use (i.e. food, timber, paper, textiles etc)
What is the atmosphere?
Envelope of gases surrounding the planet
What is the cryosphere?
Frozen part of the Earth's surface
What is the lithosphere?
Rigid outer part of the Earth (upper mantle and crust) - divided into tectonic plates
What is hydrosphere?
All the water on the Earth's surface
What is the biosphere?
Space at the Earth's surface and within atmosphere occupied by living ogranisms
What is the pedosphere?
Soil layer of Earth
At a global scale, what are the 3 main stores of the water cycle?
Oceans (biggest store)
Atmosphere (smallest store)
Land
What are the main processes by which water moves between the 3 stores?
Precipitation
Evapotranspiration
Run-off
Groundwater flow (horizontal movement of water within aquifers)
What is the long-term storage of carbon AND what % does it hold of all carbon on Earth?
Sedimentary rocks - 99.9%
What stores does the carbon in circulation move between?
Atmosphere
Oceans
Soil
Biosphere
What are the main processes by which circling carbon moves between the stores?
Photosynthesis (atmosphere to terrestrial biomass)
Respiration (terrestrial biomass to atmosphere)
Oxidation (human activity- combustion to atmosphere; decomposition- terrestrial biomass to atmosphere; soil to atmosphere)
Weathering (sedimentary rocks to atmosphere)
What is a large-scale, infrequent event which moves a large amount of carbon from sedimentary rock to the atmosphere?
Volcanic eruption
Define systems
Systems are groups of objects and the relationships that bind the objects together
What is a closed system?
A system with inputs and outputs of energy, but without any movement of materials across system boundaries
What is an open system?
A type of system whose boundaries are open to both inputs and outputs of energy and matter
What type of system are the water and carbon cycles at a global scale?
Closed systems
Why are the global water and carbon cycles closed?
Only energy (and not matter) can cross the boundaries of the global water and carbon cycles
What energy drives the global water and carbon cycles?
Sun's energy (external to the Earth)
What type of system are smaller scale water and carbon cycles?
Open systems
Examples of smaller scale cycles
Drainage basins
Forest ecosystem
Why can smaller scale cycles be considered open?
Materials as well as Sun's energy can cross system boundaries
What % of global water is stored in oceans?
97%
What % of global water is stored in polar ice and glaciers?
2%
What % of global water is stored as groundwater (aquifers)?
0.7%
What % of global water is stored in the atmosphere?
0.001%
How much water is frozen in the ice caps of Antarctica and Greenland?
3/4
How much fresh water is stored below ground in permeable rocks?
Only 1/5 of all fresh water
What can explain the fact that only a minute fraction of water is found in the atmosphere?
Rapid flux of water (into and out of the atmosphere)
What is the avg. residence time of a water molecule in the atmosphere?
9 days
How much water does the global water cycle budget circulate per year (estimate) as inputs and outputs between the principal water stores?
505,000km3
What are the main inputs and outputs of the water cycle?
Water vapour evaporated from oceans, soils, lakes and rivers
Vapour transpired through the leaves of plants
Precipitation (rain, snow, hail etc)
Condensation (fog)
Ice sheets, snowfields, glaciers release water by ablation (melting & sublimation)
Run-off (drains precipitation & meltwater from land into rivers)- BUT some continental drylands drain to inland basins (i.e. S-W USA)
After infiltrating soil, water may percolate (gravity) into permeable rocks/aquifers- eventually reaches surface (springs & seepages- contribute to run-off)
What is the biggest stores of carbon AND how much (bn tonnes)?
Sedimentary (carbonate) rocks (i.e. limestone, chalk) and deep ocean sediments - 60,000 - 100,000,000