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Natural Sources of Water

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Natural Sources of Water What is a natural source of water? Where on Earth do I find this water? Oceans Until the year 2000, there were four recognized oceans ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Natural Sources of Water


1
Natural Sources of Water
  • What is a natural source of water?
  • Where on Earth do I find this water?

2
Oceans
  • About 71 of the Earth is covered by oceans.
  • Ocean water is salty.
  • The Earths oceans are connected and form a
    continuous body of water.
  • Until the year 2000, there were four recognized
    oceans the Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, and
    Arctic.
  • In the Spring of 2000, the International
    Hydrographic Organization recognized a new ocean
    the Southern Ocean.

3
Oceans
Arctic
Atlantic
Pacific
Indian
Southern
4
Seas
  • There are also many seas.
  • Seas are smaller branches of an ocean.
  • Seas are often partly enclosed by land.
  • The largest seas are the South China Sea, the
    Caribbean Sea, and the Mediterranean Sea.

5
Seas
North Sea
South China Sea
Mediterranean Sea
Caribbean Sea
Tasman Sea
6
Rivers
  • A river is a natural stream of water, usually
    freshwater, flowing toward an ocean, a lake or
    another stream.
  • Usually larger streams are called rivers while
    smaller streams are called creeks, or brooks.

7
Rivers
Major Rivers of The World
8
Rivers of Texas
Which river do you live near?
9
Lakes
  • A lake is an inland body of water that is not
    part of the ocean.
  • They larger and deeper than a pond.
  • Most lakes on Earth are freshwater.
  • More than 60 of the Earths lakes are in Canada.

10
Lakes

Crater Lake Oregon
Great Salt LakeUtah
Lake Michigan Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois,
Indiana
Lake Tahoe Nevada, California
Caddo Lake Texas
11
Ponds
  • A pond is a body of water smaller than a lake.
  • Ponds are sometimes defined as a man-made or
    natural body of water that is between 1m2 and 2
    hectares in area, and holds water for four months
    of the year or more.
  • 1m2 is about this big, 2 hectares is about the

    size of two track fields

12
Canals
  • Canals are artificial channels for water.
  • There are two types of canals
  • Irrigation canals, which are used for the
    delivery of water
  • Waterways, which are navigable transportation
    canals used for passage of goods and people,
    often connected to existing lakes, rivers or
    oceans.

13
Glaciers
  • Presently, 10 of land area is covered with
    glaciers.
  • Glaciers store about 75 of the world's
    freshwater.
  • In the United States, glaciers cover over 75,000
    square kilometers, with most of the glaciers
    located in Alaska.
  • Glacial ice often appears blue when it has become
    very dense.

Mt. Cook New Zealand
Mt. Hood Oregon
14
Polar Ice Caps
  • Earths north pole is covered by floating pack
    ice (sea ice) over the Arctic Ocean.
  • The land mass of the Earth's south pole in
    Antarctica, is covered by the Antarctic Ice
    Sheet.
  • An iceberg is a large piece of freshwater ice
    that has broken off from a snow-formed glacier or
    ice shelf and is floating in open water.

15
Aquifers
  • An aquifer is an underground layer of rock that
    allows water to drip through it.
  • It can also be an area of gravel, sand, silt or
    clay from which groundwater can be extracted
    using a water well.

16
Puddles?
  • A puddle is a small accumulation of water,
    uncontained on a surface.
  • It can form either in little hollow areas in the
    surface, or directly upon the flat surface.
  • A puddle is generally considered to be small
    enough to step over or shallow enough to walk
    through.
  • Puddles commonly form during rainstorms.

17
What Natural Sources of Water do You Have in Your
Area?
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