Geography, asked by niamaya67, 5 days ago

class 7 geography pls answer​

Attachments:

Answers

Answered by darshna210781
2

*water cycle

The water cycle shows the continuous movement of water within the Earth and atmosphere. It is a complex system that includes many different processes. Liquid water evaporates into water vapor, condenses to form clouds, and precipitates back to earth in the form of rain and snow.

*spring tide and neap tide*

Rather, the term is derived from the concept of the tide "springing forth." Spring tides occur twice each lunar month all year long without regard to the season. Neap tides, which also occur twice a month, happen when the sun and moon are at right angles to each other. ... This occurs twice each month.

Attachments:
Answered by srikantamohapatra6c3
0

WATER CYCLE

The water cycle, also known as the hydrologic cycle or the hydrological cycle, is a biogeochemical cycle that describes the continuous movement of water on, above and below the surface of the Earth. The mass of water on Earth remains fairly constant over time but the partitioning of the water into the major reservoirs of ice, fresh water, saline water (salt water) and atmospheric water is variable depending on a wide range of climatic variables. The water moves from one reservoir to another, such as from river to ocean, or from the ocean to the atmosphere, by the physical processes of evaporation, condensation, precipitation, infiltration, surface runoff, and subsurface flow. In doing so, the water goes through different forms: liquid, solid (ice) and vapor.

IN 7 STEPS

  1. EVAPORATION
  2. CONDENSATION
  3. PRECIPITATION
  4. INTERCEPTION
  5. PERCOLATION
  6. TRANSPIRATION
  7. RUNOFF

SPRING TRIDE

A perigean spring tide, also known as a proxigean spring tide, is a tide that occurs three or four times per year when a perigee (the point nearest Earth reached by the Moon during its 27.3-day elliptic orbit) coincides with a spring tide (when the Sun, the Moon, and Earth are nearly aligned every two weeks). This has a slight but measurable impact on the spring tide, usually adding no more than a couple of inches.

Similar questions