a permeable rock layer which contains water that can be extracted for human use
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jet stream
a narrow bad of fast-moving winds high up in the atmosphere
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hydrological drought
when available water reserves fall below acceptable levels
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agricultural drought
there is insufficient moisture for average crop production
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meteorological drought
an extended period of low or absent rainfall relative to the average for a region
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store
a reservoir where water is held such as the ocean or ice caps
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flow
a movement or transfer between stores in a system
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cryosphere
consists of those areas of the Earth where water is frozen into snow or ice, including ice sheets, ice caps, alpine glaciers, sea ice and permafrost
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accumulation
is the build-up of snow and ice which takes place in the cryosphere
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ablation
the change from solid ice to liquid or water vapour when temperature rises above 0°C. This wastage of surface snow or ice is achieved by melting and evaporation
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arid
conditions mean a severe lack of water, usually defined as annual rainfall totalling less than 200-250mm
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El Niño southern oscillation (ENSO)
a sustained sea surface temperature anomaly across the central Pacific Ocean
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Earth 'snowball'
650-750 million years ago, cryosphere storage would have been much greater
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open systems
allow energy and matter to be transfered across its boundary for external areas
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permeability
the ease with which water can pass through rocks or a soil horizon
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interception
the temporary storage of precipitation on the leaves or branches of a plant
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biome
a plant community whose global distribution corresponds with a climatic region of the Earth
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dividing line between drainage basins
watershed
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through flow
rainwater dripping from leaves and branches towards the ground
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stemflow
water that falls directly onto vegetation but flows to the ground via stems and trunks
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infiltration
movement of water from the ground surface to the soil
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infiltration capacity
rate at which water can pass into the soil
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Throughflow
movement of water laterally through the soil, via a matrix of pore spaces, fissures and pipes
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percolation
the transfer of water from the soil into the underlying bedrock
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groundwater flow
the vertical and lateral movement of water through a drainage basin's underlying rock as a result of gravity and pressure
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overland flow
the movement of a sheet of water across the ground surface
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saturation-excess surface runoff
rainfall continues for a long time soil becomes saturated, through flow is deflected closer to the surface
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infiltration-excess surface runoff
surface runoff which occurs when rainfall intensity is so great that not all water can infiltrate.
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interception store
leaf and plant surfaces
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vegetation store
water held in the biomass itself, also called 'green water'
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surface store
water collected on the surface of the ground in expressions and hollows
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soil moisture store
water held in pore spaces in the soil matrix
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channel store
water held in the river channel itself at any moment in time
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groundwater store
water stored in solid rock and in any superficial deposits
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hygroscopic
water adhering in thin films by molecular attraction to the surface of soil particles
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capillary water
water forming thicker films and occupying the smaller pore spaces in the soil
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gravitational water
excess water that occupies all large and usually free-draining spaces in the soil
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evaporation
the change in state of water from a liquid to a gas
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transpiration
diffusion of water from vegetation into the atmosphere, involving a change from liquid to gas
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channel discharge
the volume of water leaving a drainage basin via its main stream or river during a specific unit of time
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antecedent conditions
the weather and soil moisture conditions immediately prior to a storm event
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peak discharge
the maximum rate of flow during a storm event
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peak rainfall
the maximum rainfall recorded in one of the time intervals
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rising limb
the part of a storm hydrographic in which the discharge starts to rise
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lag time
the time elapsed between peak rainfall and peak discharge
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falling limb
the part of the storm hydrographic in which the discharge starts to falls
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preceding discharge
the rate of flow prior to the latest storm event
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bankfull discharge
the maximum discharge reached during a storm event prior to overtopping of the river banks and the inundation of the floodplain with excess water
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baseflow
the normal minimum flow of the river
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condensation
the process by which vapour changes into a liquid or solid form. For this to happen in the atmosphere, condensation nuclei must also be present
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the feeder-seeder mechanism
a process that increases levels or orographic rainfall
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the carbon cycle
a biogeochemical cycle which moves carbon around a global system
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inorganic carbon
carbon found in the ground and not in an organism
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what is calcium carbonate
it makes up skeletons, shells and calcareous rocks
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carbon sink
a store of carbon that absorbs more carbon than it releases
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carbon source
when more carbon leaves than enters
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the pedosphere
the uppermost part of the lithosphere, the layer that chemically reacts to the atmosphere, hydrosphere and biosphere through the soil forming process
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how much carbon does marine sediments and sedimentary rocks store?
100 million GtC
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how much carbon does peat store?
250 GtC
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hydrosphere - surface layer
where sunlight penetrates so that photosynthesis can take place; contains approximately 900 GtC
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hydrosphere - intermediate layer
the deep layer of water contains approximately, 37,100 GtC
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hydrosphere - living organic matter
the amount is approximately 30 GtC and dissolved organic matter is around 700GtC
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how much carbon does the terrestrial biosphere store?
3000 GtC
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living vegetation - store
19% of carbon in biosphere - varies depending on location and vegetation type Russia - 25% of world's forest carbon
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plant litter
Fresh, undecomposed - directly effected by type of ecosystem - leaf tissue = 70% of litter in forest
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humus
thick brown substance that remains after most organic litter has decomposed forests, tropical temperate and boreal = 31% of carbon
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stores of carbon overtime
500 million years ago = 7,000ppm 2 million years ago = 190ppm now = 420ppm
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Keeling curve
(average distribution of carbon-dioxide concentration) - each year CO2 levels go up in the northern hemisphere winter due to fewer leaves - rise in levels mainly due to anthropogenic causes
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photosynthesis
suns energy to CO2 6CO2 + 6H2O --> C6H12O6 + 6O2
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respiration
water and CO2 are the by-products 6O2 + C6H12O6 --> 6H2O + 6O2
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decomposition
happens by decomposers whose role it is to break down cells and tissues in dead organisms into biomolecules and atoms
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vertical deep mixing (ocean carbon pump)
when warm waters in the ocean surface are carried from the tropics to polar regions - water cools = more dense + sinks taking CO2 with it
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combustion
organic material is burnt in the presence of O2 giving of heat, Co2 and water
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Biomass combustion
burning of living and dead vegetation immediately emits 10-20% of carbon, 80% stays in dead matter
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volcanic activity
minimal effects on carbon - So2 reflects head > Co2 absorbs heat
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Cement manufacturing
responsible for 5% of global CO2 emissions 900kg of CO2 produced for every 100kg of cement
stone lines, terracing, wind-breaks, irrigation, buffer zones, crop oration, polyculture, soil conditioning, zap, afforestation, cover crops, biological pest control
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anthropogenic CO2
carbon dioxide generated by human activity
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biosphere
the total sum of all living matter
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carbon sequestration
the capture of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere or capturing anthropogenic CO2 from large-scale stationary sources like power plants before it is released to the atmosphere. Once captured it is put into long-term storage
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greenhouse gas
any gaseous compound in the atmosphere that is capable of absorbing infrared radiation, thereby trapping and holding heat in the atmosphere
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weathering
the breakdown of rocks in situ by a combination of weather, plants and animals
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peat - definition and formation
peat is a thick layer of black or dark brown sticky and wet material. Peat is formed from the high levels of partially decomposed vegetative matter. Decomposition is prevented by a waterlogged environment which creates oxygen-deficient anaerobic conditions. the plant remains are slowly compressed as more material is added each year
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fen peatlands
where groundwater meets the surface - springs, hollows or at the edge of open water
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blanket peatlands
on hilltops which receive over 1,500mm of rain a year, fed entirely by rainfall and snowmelt instead of groundwater
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raised bogs
in valley bottom where soils are saturated due to frequent arrival of through flow and overland flow from the slopes above
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drainage and peatlands
1/4 of England's peatland under cultivation - large areas drained for faming --> degrading peat
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pollution and peatlands
reduction in peat-forming plant species (sphagnum mosses) --> erosion of peatlands begins
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burning and peatlands
burning land to encourage growth of new heather for grouse to feed on - damages wet sphagnum mosses--> exposed peat can lead to widespread and rapid erosion of pet during heavy rainfall
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grazing and peatlands
1/3 UK peatlands now support invasive species - rate of formation of peat slowed = erosion
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forestry and peatlands
bogs drained by forestry commissions - lose soil carbon via leaching and erosion
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restoration of peatland
- re-establishment of plant cover dominated by peatland species - re-wetting of drained peatlands - block erosional gullies with stone dams to raise the water table
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why is peat important?
- UK = 1/2 soil carbon storage globally = 3% of Earth's surface - 4 million km2
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Keswick flooding
November 2015, 324mm of rain - confined confluence with steep valley sides - impermeable lithology - 4 bridges destroyed and 25 closed over 6 weeks
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selective logging
- only some trees are felled, canopy remains intact - extracted by horses and helicopter - mitigates against need for roads in the area
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Peat - fenland peat
Drainage began during the roman period - drained and dried - fenland farms supply 7% of England's agriculture - generates £3 billion a year
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transport
95% of forest clearance is near to transport networks - 80% of amazon deforestation is in the arc of deforestation
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Greenland ice-sheet melting (-)
increase temp --> increase melt of ice sheet --> ice into Atlantic Ocean --> O.C.B stops (Gulf Stream) --> European ice age
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Ice loss --> cryosphere (+)
temp increase --> white surfaces decrease --> increase in dark surfaces --> increase in absorption of sunlight --> temp increase