The Hydrological Cycle
The Hydrological Cycle
The Hydrological Cycle
Fluvial – a term used to describe the processes and landforms associated with rivers.
Roughly 70% of the Earth’s surface is covered with water. Most of this water is
contained in our oceans. Some of it exists in our rivers and lakes. Much of it is frozen
in the ice sheets which exist in the northernmost and southernmost parts of our planet.
Some of it is found underground. Water is also found in our atmosphere as water
vapour.
Through a variety of processes, water is constantly moving around the planet. Rivers
flow into the oceans or lakes. Water evaporates from bodies of water (such as seas
and lakes) or the land and enters the atmosphere. Some of the water in the atmosphere
falls back to the Earth as rain, snow or even hail. Some water seeps into the ground to
join the stores of groundwater. Some of the water in the soil is taken up by the roots of
plants. Plants release water vapour into the atmosphere through their leaves. This
continuous movement of water from point to point on or below the earth’s surface and
between the Earth’s surface and the atmosphere is known as the hydrologic cycle or
the water cycle. The diagram below shows many of the processes involved in the water
cycle.
1. Evaporation
This is the process in which liquid water is changed in water vapour which is a gas.
Evaporation takes place mainly from surface water. Energy is needed for it to occur.
The energy comes from the sun’s heat and from wind. Look how quickly water
evaporates from a concrete or tarmac surface on a very hot day compared with a cooler
day!
Evaporation is also faster on a windy day compared with the calm day.
Evaporation from water surfaces on land would not be enough to keep rivers and lakes
full and provide the human population with drinking water. Fortunately, large amounts of
water evaporated from the seas and oceans are carried by air masses on to land where
condensation and precipitation take place.
2. Condensation
This is the process by which water vapour changes into water droplets. It happens when
water vapour is cooled to a level known as dew point. Condensation forms clouds and
can also occur at the surface as fog. Condensation is crucial to the water cycle because
it is responsible for the formation of clouds.
3. Precipitation
This occurs when water in any form falls from the atmosphere to the surface. This is
mainly as rain, snow, sleet and hail. Thus, water is constantly recycled between the sea,
air and land.
A spring occurs when underground water emerges at the surface. This happens where:
A permeable rock such as limestone covers an impermeable rock such as clay.
Rainwater that can percolate the impermeable rock below. This water will
emerge at the surface as a sprig provided the water table is above surface level.
When the water table in a normally dry area reaches the surface during a period
of unusually heavy rain. Such springs only flow for only a short period of time.
Throughflow is the term for water flowing through the soil. Infiltration is the passage of
water into the soil. Percolation is the downward movement of water within soil or rock.
Rainwater can be intercepted by vegetation. Interception is greatest in the wet season
when trees and plants have most leaves. Some rainwater is stored on leaves and then
evaporated directly into the atmosphere. The remaining intercepted water drips to the
ground from leaves and branches and trickles down tree trunks or plant stems
(stemflow) to the reach the ground.
Vegetation takes in moisture through its root system. It loses some of this into the air by
transpiration. Surface water is also lost by evaporation. The combination of the two as
evapotranspiration.
Inputs are where water enters the system. Stores are places where water is held.
Transfers are where water is flowing through the drainage basin system. Outputs are
where water is lost to the system.
In some countries precipitation is fairly even during the year. However, in other
countries there may be distinct wet and dry seasons. In the Caribbean, rivers may dry
up completely for several months. In deserts, small river channels may be dry for most
of the time.
Added Vocabulary is no big deal!!!
Evaporation is the process by which a liquid is converted into vapour. This
occurs on the surface of a liquid.
Transpiration is the process by which plants lose water through their leaves.
Water vapour escapes through tiny openings called stomata in the leaves.
Precipitation refers to any of the forms in which water falls from the
atmosphere and reaches the ground including rain, snow or hail.
Percolation is the process by which water moves downward through the soil.