Java Games: Flashcards, matching, concentration, and word search.

Chp.19 Cycles in Nature Vocabulary

This activity will help you to study the important vocabulary from Chp. 19.

AB
precipition(p.458)water that moves from the atmosphere to the land and oceans, including rain, snow, sleet, and hail
evaporation (p.459)the change of state from liquid to vapor
ground water (p.459)water stored in underground caverns or porous rock
decomposition (p.460)the breakdown of dead materials into carbon dioxide and water
combustion (p.460)the process of burning; includes the burning of fossil fuels
condensation (p.459)the process of cooling water vapor to a liquid that can fall to Earth as precipitation
transpiration (p.459)the passing of water vapor from a living thing through a membrane or through pores. EX.-water passes from plant leaves through openings called "stomata"--humans perspire losing water through "pores", and then this water vapor is evaporated.
photosynthesis (p.460)the process by which green plants capture light energy from the sun and change it into sugar
nitrogen cycle (p.460)the movement of nitrogen from the nonliving environment into living organisms and back again
nitrogen fixation (p.461)the process of changing nitrogen gas into forms that plants can use
succession (p.462)the gradual regrowth or development of a community of organisms over time
primary succession (p.463)succession that takes place in an area that did not previously have any plants or other organisms, no soil present,usually just bare rock
secondary succession (p.464)succession that occurs after an existing community is destroyed by a natural disaster or human neglect- there is soil left intact
pioneer species (p.463)the first organisms to grow in an area undergoing ecological succession;usually lichens in primary and fast-growing,weedy plants in secondary
water cycle (p.458)the movement of water between the ocean,atmosphere,land,and living things
runoff (p.458)water that has not soaked into the ground and flows down from a higher elevation

This activity was created by a Quia Web subscriber.
Learn more about Quia
Create your own activities