Hydrological Cycle and Aquatic Environments

 
APES – UNIT 3
 
HYDROSPHERE
 
HYDROLOGY
 
-the study of the distribution and movement of water on Earth
 
 
 
There are five
processes by which
water moves
throughout each of the
earth’s spheres
 
 
condensation
 

precipitation
 
 infiltration
 
runoff
 

evapo-transpiration
 
Water Properties
 
1.
Strong hydrogen bonds
2.
Temperature changes slowly (high heat capacity)
3.
High boiling and evaporation point
4.
Universal solvent
5.
Filters harmful UV radiation
6.
Expands when it freezes
HYDROSPHERE
75% of Earth is covered by water
97% of all water is in the Ocean
3% of all water is freshwater
 
 
Fresh water distribution:
Ice:  1.762%
Groundwater:  1.7%
Surface Fresh Water:  0.014%
Atmosphere and soil:  0.002%
 
AQUATIC BIOMES
 
TWO BROAD CATEGORIES:
 
1. MARINE/SALT WATER
  
(Ex. OCEANS, ESTUARIES)
 
2. FRESHWATER
  
(Ex. RIVERS, LAKES, WETLANDS)
 
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS USED TO
CATEGORIZE INCLUDE:
  
SALINITY, DEPTH, WATER FLOW
 
SALINITY– salt (sodium chloride)
 
Salinity levels are written in parts per thousand (ppt)
 
*ocean salinity = 35 ppt  (3.5% salt content)
  
(is affected by rainfall, evaporation, runoff, depth)
 
*freshwater is less than .5 ppt
 
*brackish water has between .5 – 17 ppt
 
NOTE: when salt water cools
and freezes, it gets denser with
salt and then it sinks. Ocean
salinity increases with depth.
 
OCEANS - FACTS
 
**ALL THE OCEANS ARE CONNECTED**
 
ATLANTIC OCEAN
 
PACIFIC OCEAN
 
ARCTIC OCEAN
 
SOUTHERN OCEAN
 
INDIAN OCEAN
 
*The largest ocean is the Pacific
*The deepest part of the Pacific is
 
at the bottom of the Mariana Trench
*The saltiest ocean is the North Atlantic (3.7 ppt)
*The salt comes from rocks & underwater volcanic eruptions
 
OCEAN – GLOBAL TEMPERUTURE REGULATOR
 
*the function of the oceans is to absorb sunlight energy which
regulates temperatures in the Earth’s atmosphere
 (without oceans, the temperatures would be too extreme for life)
*ocean temperatures affect climate and wind patterns
*currents that circulate warm waters moderate the climate of
northern lands   EX. British isles are warmed by the Gulf Stream
*ocean evaporation accounts for most of the Earth’s precipitation
 
 
OCEAN – ZONATION by light & temperature
 
Pelagic = all open ocean region
Neritic = from low tide to edge of continental shelf, shallow depth to 650 ft,
 
   well oxygenated, low pressure, lots of light
Oceanic = open sea beyond continental shelf
Epelagic / Photic = upper layer, depth (to 200 m) exposed to sunlight for
                        photosynthesis, warmest region, highest level of DO 
(dissolved oxygen)
Bathyal /Disphotic = dimly lit zone, not enough for photosynthesis
Abyssal zone / Aphotic = deep area, no sunlight, no photosynthesis, extremely
  
cold, very low DO, high pressure, high level of nutrients from
  
decaying organisms
Benthic = lowest level, ocean floor
 
OCEAN – ZONATION
 
OCEAN – TEMPERATURE ZONES
 
Surface zone = top layer , 300 meters deep, warmed by sun
Thermocline = 300 m to 700 m, temperature falls rapidly with depth
Deep zone = below thermocline to ocean bottom, dark and cold
 
OCEAN – INTERTIDAL ZONE
 
COASTLINE BETWEEN HIGH TIDE & LOW TIDE
Organisms here are exposed to sunlight, high
temperatures and desiccation during low tide
Organisms are adapted to waves
Ex. Barnacles, algae, mussels, crabs, sea stars
 
OCEAN CURRENTS
 
*Surface currents are steam-like movements of water near the
surface driven by wind patterns
            -can be warm or cold (do not mix)
*Deep currents are steam-like movements of water that flow
very slowly along ocean floor
 
* driven by difference in density due to temperature and
salinity (Denser, saltier water sinks and less dense water rises)
 
OCEAN CIRCULATION
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UuGrBhK2c7U
 
*The Ocean Conveyor Belt is driven by thermo-haline currents
*Gulf Stream carries warm Caribbean water to North Europe
   (when it gets to Iceland, it cools, becomes denser and saltier, then
sinks creating a powerful, southbound current to Antarctica)
*Cold bottom waters warm and  rise in Pacific & Indian oceans
 
 
GYRES = high vortex 
currents
 caused by
 
Corioliseffect
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h6i16CrI8ss
 
OCEANS - UPWELLING
 
*where prevailing winds from Coriolis effect
push warmer, nutrient poor surface water away
from coastline
*this surface water is replaced by cooler, nutrient
rich, deeper waters (deeper waters have high
levels of nitrates and phosphates that come from
decomposition and sinking of surface waters
plankton
*upwellings provide nutrient supply for photic
regions
*Densest water will be at 4 
° C, 
when ice
melts , surface water will sink, bottom water will
move to surface overturning oxygen to bottom
and nutrients to top
 
Currents, Waves & Shorelines
 
 currents carried on the surface of
the water are called 
waves
 
 when waves meet the land 
shorelines
are created
 
 the interaction between the sea and
the land causes some erosion of the
land which creates sediment
 
 sediment is carried into the ocean
from the waves
 
Fresh Water—Rivers
 
What is a 
river
?
A large channel
along which
water is
continually
flowing down a
slope—made of
many streams
that come
together.
 
Fresh Water —   Lakes
 
What is a 
lake
?
A body of water
of considerable
size contained
on a body of
land.
 
 
 
LAKE STRATIFICATION
 
        dystrophic
 lakes
    low food value
    full of soil particles
    water is usually brown
 oligotrophic
 lakes
     lake nourishment
     very clear water
 
MESOTROPHIC LAKES
Somewhat Clear water
Medium level of nutrients
Has beds of submerged plants
        eutrophic
 lakes
     well nourished
     intense birdlife
     lots of plankton
 
Lakes are divided into three
 
categories
 
POND STRATIFICATION
 
Littoral Zone= shallow area of soil and water near
shore where algae & plants grow, most
photosynthesis occurs here
Limnetic zone= open water, floating algae called
phytoplankton found here, extends as deep as
sunlight can penetrate
Profundal Zone= in deeper lakes, below Limnetic,
no sunlight , no photosynthesis, bacteria
decompose the detritus consuming oxygen
Benthic Zone= muddy bottom of lake/pond
 
Other Surface Waters
 
What is a 
wetland
?
An area where the water table
is at, near or above the land
surface long enough during the
year to support adapted plant
growth.
 
Other Surface Waters
 
What are the types of 
wetlands
?
Swamps, bogs, and marshes
Swamp:  a wetland dominated by trees
Bogs:  a wetland dominated by peat moss
Marshes:  a wetland dominated by grasses
 
Fresh Water --Groundwater
 
 
The water found in cracks
and pores in sand, gravel and
rocks below the earth’s
surface.
zone of aeration= layer
closest to the soils surface
Zone of saturation= under
surface layer (all open
spaces fill with water)
 
 
 
Additional Vocabulary
 
Artesian Well
a well in
which water rises because
of pressure within aquifer.
Reservoir 
a lake that
stores water for human use.
Tributary
-
a stream feeding
a larger stream or a lake
 
The Water Table
 
saturated zone: the subsurface zone in
which all rock openings are filled with
water
water table: the upper surface of the
zone of saturation
 
perched water table: the top of  a body of
ground water separated from the main water
table beneath it by a zone that is not saturated
 
The Movement of Ground Water
 
most ground water moves relatively slowly
through rock underground
because it moves in response to differences in
water pressure and elevation, water within the
upper part of the saturated zone tends to move
downward following the slope of the water table
 
Movement of ground water beneath a sloping water table in uniformly permeable
rock. Near the surface the ground water tends to flow parallel to the sloping water table
 
Aquifer
 
aquifer: a body of saturated rock or sediment
through which water can move easily
good aquifers include sandstone, conglomerate,
well-joined limestone, bodies of sand and gravel,
and some fragmental or fractured volcanic rocks
such as columnar basalt
 
Aquifers (cont.)
 
unconfined aquifer: a partially filed aquifer
exposed to the land surface and marked by a rising
and falling water table
confined aquifer (artesian aquifer): an aquifer
completely filled with pressurized water and
separated from the land surface by a relatively
impermeable confining bed, such as shale
 
Fresh Water —Streams
 
What is a 
stream
?
A small channel
along which
water is
continually
flowing down a
slope—made of
small gullies.
 
Springs and Streams
 
spring: a place where water flows naturally from
rock onto the land surface
some springs discharge where the water table
intersects the land surface, but they also occur
where water flows out from caverns or along
fractures, faults, or rock contacts that come to the
surface
 
Water moves along fractures in
crystalline rock and forms springs
 where the fractures intersect the
land surface
 
Water enters caves along joints
 in limestone and exits as springs
 at the mouths of caves
 
Springs form at the contact between
a permeable rock such as sandstone
and an underlying less permeable rock
such as shale
 
Springs can form along faults
when permeable rock has been
 moved against less permeable rock.
 Arrows show relative motion
along fault
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Dive into the fascinating world of the hydrosphere with a comprehensive look at the hydrological cycle, water properties, hydrology, salinity, aquatic biomes, and ocean facts. Discover how water moves through Earth's spheres, the distribution of freshwater, the significance of oceans, and their role as global temperature regulators.

  • Hydrology
  • Aquatic Biomes
  • Oceans
  • Water Properties
  • Salinity

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  1. APES UNIT 3 HYDROSPHERE

  2. HYDROLOGY -the study of the distribution and movement of water on Earth There are five processes by which water moves throughout each of the earth s spheres condensation precipitation infiltration runoff evapo-transpiration

  3. Water Properties 1. Strong hydrogen bonds 2. Temperature changes slowly (high heat capacity) 3. High boiling and evaporation point 4. Universal solvent 5. Filters harmful UV radiation 6. Expands when it freezes

  4. HYDROSPHERE 75% of Earth is covered by water 97% of all water is in the Ocean 3% of all water is freshwater Fresh water distribution: Ice: 1.762% Groundwater: 1.7% Surface Fresh Water: 0.014% Atmosphere and soil: 0.002%

  5. AQUATIC BIOMES TWO BROAD CATEGORIES: 1. MARINE/SALT WATER (Ex. OCEANS, ESTUARIES) 2. FRESHWATER (Ex. RIVERS, LAKES, WETLANDS) PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS USED TO CATEGORIZE INCLUDE: SALINITY, DEPTH, WATER FLOW

  6. SALINITY salt (sodium chloride) Salinity levels are written in parts per thousand (ppt) *ocean salinity = 35 ppt (3.5% salt content) (is affected by rainfall, evaporation, runoff, depth) *freshwater is less than .5 ppt *brackish water has between .5 17 ppt NOTE: when salt water cools and freezes, it gets denser with salt and then it sinks. Ocean salinity increases with depth.

  7. OCEANS - FACTS **ALL THE OCEANS ARE CONNECTED** ATLANTIC OCEAN PACIFIC OCEAN ARCTIC OCEAN SOUTHERN OCEAN INDIAN OCEAN *The largest ocean is the Pacific *The deepest part of the Pacific is at the bottom of the Mariana Trench *The saltiest ocean is the North Atlantic (3.7 ppt) *The salt comes from rocks & underwater volcanic eruptions

  8. OCEAN GLOBAL TEMPERUTURE REGULATOR *the function of the oceans is to absorb sunlight energy which regulates temperatures in the Earth s atmosphere (without oceans, the temperatures would be too extreme for life) *ocean temperatures affect climate and wind patterns *currents that circulate warm waters moderate the climate of northern lands EX. British isles are warmed by the Gulf Stream *ocean evaporation accounts for most of the Earth s precipitation

  9. OCEAN ZONATION by light & temperature Pelagic = all open ocean region Neritic = from low tide to edge of continental shelf, shallow depth to 650 ft, well oxygenated, low pressure, lots of light Oceanic = open sea beyond continental shelf Epelagic / Photic = upper layer, depth (to 200 m) exposed to sunlight for photosynthesis, warmest region, highest level of DO (dissolved oxygen) Bathyal /Disphotic = dimly lit zone, not enough for photosynthesis Abyssal zone / Aphotic = deep area, no sunlight, no photosynthesis, extremely cold, very low DO, high pressure, high level of nutrients from decaying organisms Benthic = lowest level, ocean floor

  10. OCEAN ZONATION

  11. OCEAN TEMPERATURE ZONES Surface zone = top layer , 300 meters deep, warmed by sun Thermocline = 300 m to 700 m, temperature falls rapidly with depth Deep zone = below thermocline to ocean bottom, dark and cold

  12. OCEAN INTERTIDAL ZONE COASTLINE BETWEEN HIGH TIDE & LOW TIDE Organisms here are exposed to sunlight, high temperatures and desiccation during low tide Organisms are adapted to waves Ex. Barnacles, algae, mussels, crabs, sea stars

  13. OCEAN CURRENTS *Surface currents are steam-like movements of water near the surface driven by wind patterns -can be warm or cold (do not mix) *Deep currents are steam-like movements of water that flow very slowly along ocean floor * driven by difference in density due to temperature and salinity (Denser, saltier water sinks and less dense water rises)

  14. OCEAN CIRCULATION https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UuGrBhK2c7U *The Ocean Conveyor Belt is driven by thermo-haline currents *Gulf Stream carries warm Caribbean water to North Europe (when it gets to Iceland, it cools, becomes denser and saltier, then sinks creating a powerful, southbound current to Antarctica) *Cold bottom waters warm and rise in Pacific & Indian oceans GYRES = high vortex currents caused by Corioliseffect https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h6i16CrI8ss

  15. OCEANS - UPWELLING *where prevailing winds from Coriolis effect push warmer, nutrient poor surface water away from coastline *this surface water is replaced by cooler, nutrient rich, deeper waters (deeper waters have high levels of nitrates and phosphates that come from decomposition and sinking of surface waters plankton *upwellings provide nutrient supply for photic regions *Densest water will be at 4 C, when ice melts , surface water will sink, bottom water will move to surface overturning oxygen to bottom and nutrients to top

  16. Currents, Waves & Shorelines currents carried on the surface of the water are called waves when waves meet the land shorelines are created the interaction between the sea and the land causes some erosion of the land which creates sediment sediment is carried into the ocean from the waves

  17. Fresh WaterRivers What is a river? A large channel along which water is continually flowing down a slope made of many streams that come together.

  18. Fresh Water Lakes What is a lake? A body of water of considerable size contained on a body of land.

  19. LAKE STRATIFICATION

  20. Lakes are divided into threecategories dystrophic dystrophic lakes low food value full of soil particles water is usually brown oligotrophic oligotrophic lakes lake nourishment very clear water MESOTROPHIC LAKES Somewhat Clear water Medium level of nutrients Has beds of submerged plants eutrophic eutrophic lakes well nourished intense birdlife lots of plankton

  21. POND STRATIFICATION Littoral Zone= shallow area of soil and water near shore where algae & plants grow, most photosynthesis occurs here Limnetic zone= open water, floating algae called phytoplankton found here, extends as deep as sunlight can penetrate Profundal Zone= in deeper lakes, below Limnetic, no sunlight , no photosynthesis, bacteria decompose the detritus consuming oxygen Benthic Zone= muddy bottom of lake/pond

  22. Other Surface Waters What is a wetland? An area where the water table is at, near or above the land surface long enough during the year to support adapted plant growth. wetland 5_Wetland1

  23. Other Surface Waters What are the types of wetlands? Swamps, bogs, and marshes Swamp: a wetland dominated by trees Bogs: a wetland dominated by peat moss Marshes: a wetland dominated by grasses tree-reflections-great-dismal-swamp VoloBog

  24. Fresh Water --Groundwater The water found in cracks and pores in sand, gravel and rocks below the earth s surface. zone of aeration= layer closest to the soils surface Zone of saturation= under surface layer (all open spaces fill with water)

  25. Additional Vocabulary Artesian Well a well in which water rises because of pressure within aquifer. Reservoir a lake that stores water for human use. Tributary-a stream feeding a larger stream or a lake ch10-artesian-well-montreal1

  26. The Water Table saturated zone: the subsurface zone in which all rock openings are filled with water water table: the upper surface of the zone of saturation perched water table: the top of a body of ground water separated from the main water table beneath it by a zone that is not saturated

  27. The Movement of Ground Water most ground water moves relatively slowly through rock underground because it moves in response to differences in water pressure and elevation, water within the upper part of the saturated zone tends to move downward following the slope of the water table Movement of ground water beneath a sloping water table in uniformly permeable rock. Near the surface the ground water tends to flow parallel to the sloping water table

  28. Picture of a hole dug at the beach, showing standing water at the bottom of the hole. Very similar to the top of the water table. Aquifer aquifer: a body of saturated rock or sediment through which water can move easily good aquifers include sandstone, conglomerate, well-joined limestone, bodies of sand and gravel, and some fragmental or fractured volcanic rocks such as columnar basalt

  29. Aquifers (cont.) unconfined aquifer: a partially filed aquifer exposed to the land surface and marked by a rising and falling water table confined aquifer (artesian aquifer): an aquifer completely filled with pressurized water and separated from the land surface by a relatively impermeable confining bed, such as shale

  30. Fresh Water Streams What is a stream? A small channel along which water is continually flowing down a slope made of small gullies.

  31. Springs and Streams spring: a place where water flows naturally from rock onto the land surface some springs discharge where the water table intersects the land surface, but they also occur where water flows out from caverns or along fractures, faults, or rock contacts that come to the surface Water enters caves along joints in limestone and exits as springs at the mouths of caves Springs can form along faults when permeable rock has been moved against less permeable rock. Arrows show relative motion along fault Water moves along fractures in crystalline rock and forms springs where the fractures intersect the land surface Springs form at the contact between a permeable rock such as sandstone and an underlying less permeable rock such as shale

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