Water Cycle SE
Water Cycle SE
Water Cycle SE
The water that comes out of your faucet at home used to be in the ocean. How did water get
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Gizmo Warm-up
Water on Earth is always in motion. These motions
form a repeating circuit called the water cycle. The
Water Cycle Gizmo allows you to explore the different
paths water takes as it moves from Earth’s surface to
the atmosphere and back.
2. Click Atmosphere. How does the Sun cause water to move from the oceans to the
atmosphere? ______________________________________________________________
4. Click Precip (rain). (“Precip” is short for precipitation, or water falling to Earth’s surface.)
5. Click Oceans again, and then choose the PATH tab. Because it has the same beginning
and end, the path is a complete cycle. How many steps does this cycle have? ___________
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Activity: Get the Gizmo ready:
The water cycle Select the SIMULATION tab, and click Reset.
1. Collect data: Create two water cycles using the Gizmo. Each cycle should have at least four
steps and should begin and end at the same location. Choose any starting point from the list
on the right. When the cycle is complete, choose the PATH tab and write the steps below.
Cycle 1: ________________________________________________________________
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Cycle 2: ________________________________________________________________
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2. Analyze: Use the information presented in the Gizmo to answer the following questions.
C. What percentage of Earth’s fresh water is stored in ice and snow? ______________
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G. What human activity uses the most water in the United States? _________________
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Activity (continued from previous page)
3. Define: A phase change is a change from one state to another, such as from a liquid to a
gas. Based on what you have read in the Gizmo, fill in the blanks with the words “liquid,”
“gas,” or “solid” to define each change.
4. Practice: Fill in the process that causes each transition. Your choices are evaporation,
condensation, precipitation, melting, and freezing.
5. Practice: Fill in the two processes that cause each of the following transitions.
6. Think and discuss: Water covers over two-thirds of Earth’s surface. Yet water shortages are
a major problem for many people around the world. Why do you think this is the case?
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