Science, asked by nessafart36, 5 months ago

Question: How does carbon move between the atmosphere, hydrosphere, biosphere, and geosphere?

Explore: Use the Gizmo to create a path for carbon that begins and ends in the atmosphere. Fill in the steps in the path below. Then, label each location with the system it represents. Finally, summarize very briefly how the carbon atom got to that location.

Carbon path
System
How it got there
Atmospheric CO2
Atmosphere
Atmospheric CO2 comes from volcanoes, burning fossil fuels, and other sources.
exposed rocks

hydrosphere
atmospheric carbon dioxide is dissolved in the cold water.
oceanic CO2

biosphere

shelieporal

geosphere

limestone



cement



Atmospheric CO2



help me please

Answers

Answered by aysiamone03
26

Answer: Hope im not to late hope this helps

Explanation: Land Plants (Biosphere) -Plants go through photosynthesis

Land Animal: (Biosphere) -Animals eat plants to gain energy

Soil Geosphere -Animals die and remains decay into the soil

Sediment: (Geosphere) -Soil washed into streams and build up underwater masses

Lithosphere: (Geosphere) -Sediments get compressed into sedimentary rocks that are rich in carbon

Volcano: (Geosphere) -Rocks melt underground and release CO2 which is mixed into magma

Atmospheric CO2:  (Atmosphere)- Volcano erupts putting CO2 back into the atmosphere

Answered by Jasleen0599
3

Gases containing carbon move between the sea's surface and the climate through a process called dissemination.

  • Carbon moves from plants to creatures.
  • Through well-established pecking orders, the carbon that is in plants moves to the creatures that eat them.
  • Creatures and plants need to dispose of carbon dioxide gas through a process called breath.
  • Carbon moves from petroleum products to the air when fills are singed.
  • A few processes move carbon from the geosphere to the climate. Volcanic ejections discharge carbon dioxide from liquid stones underneath the world's surface.
  • The production of concrete that is utilized for homes, high rises, roads, and other hardscapes all over the planet deliver a gigantic measure of carbon dioxide.
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