Water Cycle Webquest 2
Water Cycle Webquest 2
Water Cycle Webquest 2
Date ______________________
Oceans- 96.5
Ice and snow- 69
Bio water- .26
groundwater- 30.1%
glaciers and ice caps- 68.7%
freshwater- 2.5
surface water and other freshwater- 1.2
rivers.49
swamps and marshes- 2.6
soil moisture- 3.8
lakes- 20.9
atmo water- 3
6. Of the freshwater, where is most of the water tied up? In ice burgs
7. Of the remaining freshwater, where is the largest majority of that water found? Lakes
and rivers
8. What percentage of freshwater is found as surface water? 1.2%
9. Compare the amount of freshwater to the amount of saltwater in cubic kilometers:
most of the worlds salt water is 96 percent that is unusable
3. Besides clouds, what else can happen due to condensation? Ground level fog
Evaporation
1. Define evaporation: water changes from a liquid to a gas or vapor
2. Where does most of the evaporated water come from? oceans, seas, lakes, and rivers
3. What is necessary in order for evaporation to occur? heat
4. What percentage of the water evaporated from the ocean is transported over land and falls as
precipitation? 10%
5. How long does an evaporated water molecule stay in the air? 10 days
Evapotranspiration
1. According to this website, define evapotranspiration: (beneath the diagram) sum of
2.
3.
4.
5.
Freshwater Storage
1. What bodies of water does surface water include: streams (of all sizes, from large rivers to
small creeks), ponds, lakes, reservoirs and canals (man-made lakes and streams), and
freshwater wetlands
What processes are included in inflows to surface water? precipitation, overland runoff,
groundwater seepage, and tributary inflows
What processes are included in outflows of surface water? evaporation, movement of water into
groundwater, and withdrawals by people
Groundwater Discharge
1. Describe why groundwater is an important part of the water cycle: People have been using
groundwater for thousands of years and continue to use it today, largely for drinking water
and irrigation. Life on Earth depends on groundwater just as it does on surface water
2. Where is the majority of groundwater found? occupies the spaces between rocks and
subsurface material
3. When are aquifers formed? spaces between the soil and rock particles can be totally filled
with water
Explain how water becomes part of the groundwater. Some of the precipitation that falls onto
the land infiltrates into the ground
Groundwater Storage
1. Where does most of the water in groundwater come from? precipitation that infiltrates
downward from the land surface
2. Describe the difference between the saturated zone and the unsaturated zone: saturated zone,
where all of the pores, cracks, and spaces between rock particles are saturated with water
unsaturated zone, where water is present in varying amounts that change over time, but
does not saturate the soil
3. What is the water table? The top of the surface where groundwater occurs
4. To what level would you have to dig to find water? To the saturated zone
Recharge to
Water Table
Unsaturated
Zone
Water Table
Infiltration
1. What is happening to water during infiltration? Goes into soil and rock
2. What happens to water that infiltrates the shallow soil layer? it might enter a stream by seepage
into the stream bank
3. What happens to the water that infiltrates deeper? recharging groundwater aquifers.
Oceans
1.
2.
What percentage
of water is found in the ocean? 96.5
,000,000
mi3
3.
What percentage of evaporated water comes from the ocean? 90
Precipitation
1. What forms of water can precipitation take? _ rain, freezing rain, sleet, snow, or hail.
2. How does most precipitation fall? rain
3. What has to happen before water can fall as precipitation? first tiny water droplets must
condense on even tinier dust, salt, or smoke particles
4. How do water droplets grow? result of additional condensation of water vapor when the
particles collide
5. Draw how raindrops actually look up to 3 mm:
Snowmelt Runoff
1. In what type of climates does snowmelt runoff play a significant role in streamflow? warmer
2. What percentage of freshwater in the western states comes from snowmelt runoff? 75
Springs
1. What are springs a result of? aquifer being filled to the point that the water overflows onto
the land surface
Streamflow
1. How does USGS define streamflow? amount of water flowing in a river
2. What is a stream? flowing water bodies
3. Why do rivers exist? drinking-water supplies and irrigation water, to produce electricity, to
flush away wastes (hopefully, but not always, treated wastes), to transport merchandise,
and to obtain food
4. Where does water generally seek to flow? center of the Earth
Surface Runoff
1. What is surface runoff? precipitation runoff over the landscape
2. When does runoff occur? By rivers
Place the letter from the diagram above in the space provided next to its associated term in
the lists below:
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
] Condensation
] Evapotranspiration
] Groundwater discharge
] Infiltration
] Snowmelt runoff to streams
] Streamflow
] Surface runoff
] Water storage in ice and snow
] Desublimation [ ] Plant uptake
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
] Evaporation
] Freshwater storage
] Groundwater storage
] Precipitation
] Spring
] Sublimation
] Water storage in the atmosphere
] Water storage in oceans