Water & Carbon cycle definitions

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Last updated 3:00 PM on 2/1/26
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74 Terms

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Acidification

The gradual reduction of pH of the oceans, due to dissolving carbon

dioxide from the atmosphere.

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Afforestation

Planting trees and vegetation in the aim of increasing forest cover.

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Anticyclone

A system of high pressure, causing high temperatures and unseasonably high evaporation rates.

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Aquifer

A permeable or porous rock which stores water.

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Biofuel

Burning crops and vegetation for electricity and heat.

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Carbon capture & storage

The capture of carbon dioxide emissions directly from the factory, pumped into disused mines rather than being released into the atmosphere.

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Carbon fluxes

The movement of carbon between stores.

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Carbon neutral

A process that has no net addition of carbon dioxide to the

environment.

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Carbon stores

Places where carbon accumulates for a period of time such as

rocks and plant matter.

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Channel flow

Water flowing in a rivulet, stream or river.

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Choke points

Points in the logistics of energy and fuel that are prone to restriction.

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Combustion

The process of burning a substance, in the presence of oxygen, to

release energ

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Convectional precipitation

Solar radiation heats the air above the ground, causing it to rise, cool & condense forming precipitation (often as thunderstorms).

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Cryopshere

The global water volume locked up within a frozen state (i.e. snow and

ice).

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Decomposition

The break down of matter, often by a decomposer which releases

carbon dioxide through their own respiration.

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Depression

A system of low pressure, with fronts of precipitation where low and

high pressure air masses meet.

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Desalination plant

The conversion of seawater to freshwater, suitable for human

consumption.

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Desublimation

The change of state of water from gas to solid, without being a

liquid (the opposite process to sublimation).

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Drainage basin

The area of land drained by a river and its tributaries.

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Drainage density

The total length of all rivers & streams divided by the area of the

drainage basin

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Drought

An extended period of deficient rainfall relative to the statistical average for the region (UN).

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Economic water scarcity

When water resources are available but insufficient

economic wealth limits access to it.

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Energy mix

The composition of a country’s energy sources.

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Energy security

The ownership and full control of a country’s energy source,

production and transportation.

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Energy pathway

The movement of energy from its extraction or source, through

pipes, freight logistics or cabling.

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Energy players

Key companies and individuals who own, distribute and sell

energy and energy sources.

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Enhanced greenhouse effect

The build-up of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, reducing the amount of solar radiation reflected into space.

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ENSO cycles

El Niño Southern Oscillations - naturally occurring phenomena that

involves the movement of warm water in the Equatorial Pacific.

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Evapotranspiration

The combined total moisture transferred from the Earth to the

atmosphere, through evaporation and transpiration.

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Frontal precipitation

Where air masses of different temperatures meet at a front, one mass will be forced over another, causing precipitation beneath the front.

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Global hydrological cycle

The continuous transfer of water between land, atmosphere and oceans. The Earth is a closed system.

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Groundwater flow

Water moving horizontally through permeable or porous rock

due to gravity.

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Hydrological drought

Insufficient soil moisture to meet the needs of vegetation

(crops, trees, plants) at a particular time

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Infiltration

The movement of water vertically through the pores in soil.

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Integrated drainage basin management

Establishing a frame of coordinated efforts between administrations (e.g. local government) and stakeholders (e.g businesses) to achieve balanced management of a basin (World Bank).

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Inorganic carbon

Carbon stored in carbonated rocks.

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Interception

Raindrops are prevented from falling directly onto the ground, instead

hitting the leaves of a tree.

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Meteorological drought

When long-term precipitation trends are below average.

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Monsoon

The drastic variation between wet and dry seasons for sub-tropical areas, caused by a changed prevailing wind. Can lead to annual flooding.

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Non renewable

A source of energy that can only be used once to generate

electricity or takes thousands of years to replace e.g. Fossil Fuels.

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Nuclear fusion

The process of joining atomic nuclei together, to produce energy.

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OPEC

Oil and Petroleum exporting countries. An organisation that supports and coordinates fossil fuel exporting countries.

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Open system

- A system affected by external flows and inputs (such as a drainage basin, or a sediment cell).

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Organic carbon

Carbon stored in plant material and living organisms.

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Outgassing

The release of dissolved carbon dioxide (e.g. at plate boundaries,

warming the oceans).

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Percolation

Water moving vertically from soil into permeable rock.

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Photosynthesis

The process of converting carbon dioxide and water into glucose

and oxygen. All plants and some organisms rely on this process to survive.

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Physical water scarcity

A physical lack of available freshwater which cannot

meet demand.

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Phytoplankton

Small organisms that rely on photosynthesis to survive, so intake

carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

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Primary energy

The initial source of energy, as it is naturally found. This could be

natural ores, water, crops or radioactive material.

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Relief precipitation

Precipitation caused when air masses are forced to rise over

high land, determined by the relief/ morphology of the land.

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Renewable

Primary energy that can be re-used to produce electricity or has a

short lifetime, therefore any used can be replaced quickly e.g. Hydroelectric, biomass, solar.

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River regime

The pattern of river discharge over a year.

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Runoff

Water flowing over the surface of the ground eg. after precipitation or

snowmelt.

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Salinisation

Where salt water contaminates freshwater stores or soils, creating

saline conditions and reducing human use/ consumption.

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Saltwater encroachment

The movement of saltwater into freshwater aquifers or soils. This may be caused by sea level rise, storm surges or over-extraction.

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Secondafy energy

The product of primary energy, mostly electricity.

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Sequestration

The transfer of carbon from the atmosphere to stores elsewhere -

living biosphere, inorganic rocks, etc.

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Smart irrigation

Providing crops with a water supply less than optimal, to make

crops resistant to water shortages.

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Storm hydrograph

Variation of river discharge over a short period of time (days).

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Sublimation

The change of state of water from solid to a gas, without being a

liquid

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Thermohaline circulation

The movement of volumes of seawater from cold deep

water to warm water surface water.

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Throughflow

Water moving horizontally through the soil, due to gravity.

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Tipping point

A critical threshold where any changes to a system after the tipping

point are irreversible.

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Transpiration

The process through which water evaporates through the stomata in

plants' leaves.

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Urbanisation

The growth of populations in towns and cities.

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Water budget

The annual balance between inputs and outputs within a system.

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Water conservation

Strategies to reduce water usage and demand.

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Water recycling

The treatment and purification of waste water, to increase supply.

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Water scarcity

There are limited renewable water sources (between 500 and 1000

cubic metres per capita per year).

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Water security

There are limited renewable water sources (between 500 and 1000

cubic metres per capita per year).

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Water sharing treaty

International agreements for transboundary sources

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Water transfer

Hard engineering projects, such as pipelines or aqueducts, that

divert water between basins to meet demand.

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Watershed

The boundary between neighbouring drainage basins.