The Water Cycle

The Watershed Game

The Water Cycle

 

What is a Water Cycle?

A water cycle describes how water moves through a watershed and cycles through the earth and the atmosphere. Water can be in different forms, like rain or condensation during different parts of the water cycle.

Understanding the water cycle is much easier with a picture.

Can you recognize the different parts of the water cycle in the image below?

Water Cycle

Steps in the Water Cycle:

1)  The sun heats up water and causes it to evaporate from lakes, rivers, and the ocean.

2)  The evaporated water condensates into clouds in the sky.

3)  Water falls back to the earth from the clouds as precipitation. Precipitation can be in many forms, including rain, snow, sleet, or hail.

4)  Runoff from rain and snowmelt flows into streams, rivers, lakes, and to the ocean.

From here, the cycle begins again.

 

Do we run out of water?

Earth's water cycle is a closed cycle. This means that the amount of water we have now is all the water we will ever have. Even though the earth has a lot of water, the supply of the freshwater that people depend on is limited.

The ocean contains 96.5% of the water on earth, and the freshwater people depend on only makes up only 3.5% of the water on earth, and 68% of that freshwater is frozen as glaciers, ice caps and snow!

We may not run out of water, but we have to protect our water from contamination to ensure we have enough freshwater available.

 

Now that you've learned more about watersheds and the water cycle, it's time to begin the game! Click below to begin.

Next: Begin the Game