phases of water - water can exist as a liquid, ice, or vapor, reservoir - any place water is stored, including the ocean, lakes, rivers, under the ground, and in clouds, water table - the upper boundary of a groundwater reservoir, runoff - the movement of water over Earth's surface, typically as a result of precipitation, and eventually flowing into streams, rivers, lakes, and oceans, transpiration - the process by which water vapor is released from plants into the atmosphere through tiny pores in their leaves called stomata, watershed - an area of land where all of the water that drains off it or falls on it flows into the same place, such as a river, lake, or ocean, base flow - a portion of the stream flow that is not runoff; it is water from the ground, flowing into the channel over a long time and with a certain dela, hydrogeologist - a scientist who studies the distribution, movement, and quality of groundwater, as well as its interaction with surface water and the rock formations it flows through, deep currents - ocean currents that flow below the surface of the ocean and are driven by differences in water density, temperature, and salinity, ocean conveyor belt - global circulation of ocean water, driven by the interplay of thermohaline circulation, upwelling, and the rotation of Earth, gyre - a large system of rotating ocean currents that form circular patterns, salinity - the measure of the concentration of dissolved salts in water, surface current - horizontal movement of ocean water near the surface caused by wind, Earth's rotation, and differences in water density and temperature, thermohaline - the process by which deep ocean currents are created through changes in temperature and salinity, ocean zone - different regions in the ocean with unique physical and biological characteristics, such as depth, temperature, and light levels, influencing the types of marine life found there, abyssal plain - a vast, flat area on the ocean floor typically found at depths of 3,000 to 6,000 meters, covered by fine sediment and formed by the accumulation of eroded material, bathymetry - the measurement and mapping of ocean depths, typically using sonar and other techniques to create detailed charts of the ocean floor, continental slope - the steeply sloping edge of the continental shelf leading to the ocean floor, marking the boundary between continental and oceanic crust, seamont - an underwater mountain rising from the ocean floor, often with a pointed summit, formed by volcanic activity or as a result of tectonic processes, sonar - a technology that uses sound waves to measure the depth of the ocean floor and detect underwater objects, providing valuable information for mapping and navigation,
0%
Unit 8 Intro to the Hydrosphere
共享
共享
共享
由
Joannatellefsen
编辑内容
打印
嵌入
更多
作业
排行榜
显示更多
显示更少
此排行榜当前是私人享有。单击
,共享
使其公开。
资源所有者已禁用此排行榜。
此排行榜被禁用,因为您的选择与资源所有者不同。
还原选项
填字游戏
是一个开放式模板。它不会为排行榜生成分数。
需要登录
视觉风格
字体
需要订阅
选项
切换模板
显示所有
播放活动时将显示更多格式。
打开成绩
复制链接
QR 代码
删除
恢复自动保存:
?