Title: Chapter 4 The Water Planet
1Chapter 4 The Water Planet
2II. WATER RESOURCES
3A. Surface water
- Headwaters are formed from the runoff of
precipitation toward the lowlands and coasts
4A. Surface water
- Headwaters are the first and smallest streams to
form from this runoff
5A. Surface water
- Tributaries are any smaller stream or river that
flow into a larger stream or river
Tributaries of the vena cava
6A. Surface water
- A watershed is an area of land that is drained by
a river and its tributaries
7A. Surface water
- Rivers are a valuable resource, providing water
for agriculture, electricity, transportation, and
cities
8A. Surface water
- An estuary is where rivers meet an arm of the sea
9A. Surface water
- Estuaries are semi-enclosed bodies of fresh water
and seawater that are rich in fish and shellfish
10A. Surface water
- Lakes are formed when runoff water fills a
depression on the land surface
11A. Surface water
- Most Lakes are fresh water, except for some like
the Great Salt Lake
The Great Salt Lake is a remnant of the massive
ancient Lake Bonneville. The lake is now
landlocked and its waters are salty The salinity
of the water averages about 12, making it much
saltier than the ocean. The water is so buoyant
that people can easily float
12A. Surface water
- Lakes are different from seas
13A. Surface water
- Lakes
- Totally surrounded by land
- Are usually not at sea level
- Do not exchange water with oceans
14A. Surface water
- Wetlands are land areas that become flooded for
at least part of the year
15A. Surface water
- The Everglades in Florida are one of the
best-known wetlands
16B. Groundwater
- Groundwater is beneath the surface of the land
found in spaces between rocks and soil -
17B. Groundwater
- Water seeps downward and stops when the spaces
in the ground are saturated
18B. Groundwater
- The top of this saturated layer is called the
water table
19B. Groundwater
- Groundwater flows through layers of rock to form
an aquifer
20C. The oceans
- Oceans cover about 71 of the earths surface
21C. The oceans
- Oceans are one continuous global body of water
surrounding the continents
22C. The oceans
- This global ocean is divided into four separate
oceans - Atlantic
- Pacific
- Indian
- Arctic
23C. The oceans
- The Pacific Ocean is the largest feature on
Earth, covering an area larger than all the
continents combined
24C. The oceans
- The Atlantic and Indian Oceans are each about
half the size of the Pacific
25C. The oceans
- The Arctic Ocean is the smallest ocean
26C. The oceans
- Smaller bodies of salt water include seas, which
are connected to the oceans
27Seas of the world
28C. The oceans
- Gulfs are near coasts and extend into the land -
usually larger, more enclosed, and more deeply
indented than bays
29C. The oceans
30C. The oceans
- Ocean depths varies greatly
-
- The most shallow part of the ocean is the
- continental shelf, which slopes downward
- from the continent
The continental shelf slants from the shore's
low-tide line to the continental slope, a cliff
that plunges abruptly to the deep Ocean floor.
The shelf can be a few miles wide to over 200
miles, reaching a depth of 450 feet. It collects
most of the sand, silts and other sediments from
rivers. The eastern continental shelf of the US
is over 3 times as wide as that on the West Coast
31C. The oceans
- The greatest ocean depth is in the Mariana
Trench, located in the North Pacific Ocean
32D. Characteristics of seawater
- Seawater contains every element known on the
earth, even gold
33D. Characteristics of seawater
- Salts are the most common material found in
seawater and about 3.5 of seawater is dissolved
salts
34D. Characteristics of seawater
- Because of its salt content, people cannot use
seawater for drinking or for agriculture
Drinking seawater promotes dehydration because
seawater is a thirsty solution. As the seawater
flows through the stomach and intestine it draws
water out of bodily tissues. Seawater has a lower
concentration of water than pure water has
(because of the salt!), so water molecules will
migrate toward seawater. If the seawater is in a
person's stomach or intestines, water will move
toward the seawater from the body's tissues,
resulting in dehydration.
35D. Characteristics of seawater
- Desalination is an expensive method to remove
salt from seawater
36D. Characteristics of seawater
- Oceans do not have the temperature extremes of
land
37D. Characteristics of seawater
- The ocean waters are always moving and
circulating