字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント You're watching FreeSchool! The water on our planet is always moving. From the sky to the ground and back again, water is constantly in motion! This journey is called the water cycle. It's also known as the hydrologic cycle. (Hydrology is a word that means the science of water.) The water cycle is what makes clouds ... rain and snow ... and causes most weather. Water is essential for life on earth, and the water cycle is how it gets where it needs to be. The cycle begins when water on the earth's surface, in lakes, oceans, rivers, and even puddles, is heated up by the sun. This heat causes the water to evaporate, or turn from a liquid into a gas. This gaseous water, called water vapor, rises into the air. As the water vapor rises high into the sky, colder temperatures cause it to condense - or change from a gas to a liquid - into tiny water droplets. These tiny water droplets group together to form clouds. Although a cloud can easily weigh many tons, the individual water droplets are at first not heavy enough to fall from the sky. Eventually, though, the water droplets crash into each other and join together into larger drops, until they are heavy enough to fall to earth as precipitation - that is, as rain, snow, or ice. Once back on the surface, the water collects in puddles, streams, lakes, and oceans, and the cycle begins all over again. The earth's water is constantly being recycled. We cannot make any new water, but water is not destroyed when we use it, either. The amount of water on the earth now is the same as there was when dinosaurs lived here. The water you used to brush your teeth today might be some of the same water that a dinosaur drank a long, long time ago! I hope you enjoyed learning about the water cycle today. Goodbye till next time!
A2 初級 米 子どものための水循環のすべて:子どものための水循環入門 - FreeSchool (All About the Water Cycle for Kids: Introduction to the Water Cycle for Children - FreeSchool) 158 26 rihrong に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語