WCC: Water, Carbon and Climate - The Relationship Between the Water and Carbon Cycles in the Atmosphere Flashcards
The relationship between the water cycle and carbon cycle in the atmosphere.
Give 6 similarities between the water and carbon cycles.
- Natural systems.
- Exist in a state of dynamic equilibrium.
- Fragile and easily damaged by humans.
- Crucial to life on earth.
- Atmosphere, biosphere, hydrosphere and lithosphere crucial to both.
- Changes have a massive knock-on effect on life on Earth.
Give 3 key links between the water and carbon cycles
Rainwater absorbs carbon.
Dissolved carbon is transported by rivers to the sea and used by marine organisms to build shells.
Some dissolved carbon in ocean and river water is returned to the atmosphere through diffusion.
State and describe the pH of pure water.
7.0 - neutral
State and describe the pH of natural unpolluted rainwater.
5.6 - mildly acidic
Which 3 atmospheric substances make rainwater acidic?
CO2
Nitric acid
Sulphur dioxide
Which greenhouse gas is the primary source of acidity in unpolluted rainwater?
CO2
How much can polluted air affect the pH of rainwater?
Rainwater can become very acidic with a pH of 4 or lower
Give evidence to show how acidic rainwater can become.
In 1982 a fog on the west coast of the US had a pH of 1.8
What is carbonation?
The reaction between carbonic acid and calcium carbonate in rocks to create dissolved calcium bicarbonate
How does acid rain increase the rate of weathering?
It increases the rate of carbonation through the presence of carbonic acid
What is the most significant link between water and carbon in the atmosphere?
Changes in the carbon cycle can cause warming, allowing the atmosphere to hold more moisture.
Why does the warming of the atmosphere not mean everywhere will experience more precipitation?
It may disrupt normal weather patterns which could lead to less rain in some regions
What disruption in normal weather patterns could reduce rain in some regions?
Increased frequency of El Nino
What is El Nino?
A pattern of unusually warm water stretching across the surface of eastern equatorial Pacific that occurs every 3-7 years.
How is climate change likely to affect El Nino?
It may double the frequency of particularly strong ‘super’ El Nino events