1 / 26

Cycles of Matter

Cycles of Matter. Water, Carbon, and Nitrogen. The Water Cycle. Water from oceans , lakes, and other bodies of water re-enters the atmosphere through evaporation. Evaporation. Water that has condensed in the air forms clouds . Drops fall to Earth and accumulate in oceans and lakes.

hugohibbard
Download Presentation

Cycles of Matter

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cycles of Matter Water, Carbon, and Nitrogen

  2. The Water Cycle

  3. Water from oceans, lakes, and other bodies of water re-enters the atmosphere through evaporation. Evaporation

  4. Water that has condensed in the air forms clouds. Drops fall to Earth and accumulate in oceans and lakes. Precipitation

  5. Plants and animals return water to environment through transpiration. Animals return water to ground and bodies of water through urine. Transpiration

  6. Create a key to label the diagram. • Add arrows to show the directionality of the water through the system. • Draw an example of transpiration and in your diagram and label it in the key. The Water Cycle

  7. Sun (energy) • Cloud • Evaporation • Precipitation • Ocean • Transpiration The Water Cycle Key

  8. The Sun __________water from oceans and lakes. As the air rises, it __________. The water __________into tiny droplets of water. The droplets crowd together and form a __________. Wind blows the cloud toward the land. The tiny droplets join together and fall as __________to the ground. The water soaks into the ground and __________in rivers and lakes. The __________never ends and starts again. The Water Cycle

  9. The Sun evaporates water from oceans and lakes. As the air rises, it cools. The water condenses into tiny droplets of water. The droplets crowd together and form a cloud. Wind blows the cloud toward the land. The tiny droplets join together and fall as precipitationto the ground. The water soaks into the ground and collects in rivers and lakes. The cycle never ends and starts again. The Water Cycle

  10. The Carbon Cycle

  11. Plants use CO2 from the atmosphere to make high-energy carbon molecules. Photosynthesis

  12. CO2 is released through aerobic respiration (breathing, for example). Respiration

  13. CO2 is exchanged between the air and water. Gas Exchange

  14. When organisms die and decay, the carbon molecules in them enter the soil. Microorganisms breakdown the molecules, releasing CO2. Decomposition

  15. Remains of dead organisms are converted into fossil fuels (over millions of years!) Combustion of fossil fuels and wood releases CO2. Pollution

  16. Label the diagram using the numbers in the notes to indicate each step in the cycle. The Carbon Cycle

  17. The Nitrogen Cycle

  18. Lightning and bacteria convert atmospheric nitrogen into nitrates (NO3) and ammonia (NH3) The air we breathe is about 78% nitrogen in the form of N2 gas and about 21% oxygen in the form of O2 gas. Nitrogen In the Air

  19. Plants receive their nitrogen through the soil, water, and air. Nitrogen in Plants

  20. When animals die their decomposing bodies add the nitrogen back into the soil. Animals also add nitrogen to the soil through feces. Animals receive nitrogen from the plants they eat or from other animals that eat plants. Nitrogen in Animals

  21. Nitrogen compounds breakdown into gas and return to air. Return to Atmosphere

  22. Runoff of nitrates in fertilizers enters groundwater and soil. Denitrification is an important step in the nitrogen cycle where nitrogen is released back into the atmosphere. Nitrates are water-soluble and leach out of the soil, flowing into groundwater and collecting in lakes and wetlands. Nitrogen in Soil and Water

  23. Man made pollution such as vehicle exhaust, power-plant exhaust, man made fertilizers and large-animal feeding operations are all sources of nitrogen emissions. Nitrous Oxide from burning fossilfuels falls as Nitric Acid in rainwater. Man and Pollution

  24. Label the diagram using the numbers in the notes above to indicate each step in the cycle. • Add examples for 4 and 6. The Nitrogen Cycle

More Related