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STUDENTS:
Module 5: Environmental Cycles and Processes
Carbon: The Element of Surprise |
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Carbon: The Element of Surprise - Reviews the processes that recycle carbon between living and non-living COMPONENTS of the Earth's systems. |
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The delicate balance of
chemical changes |
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This energy removes hydrogen atoms from water that enters through the plant roots and releases carbon from carbon dioxide. The carbon dioxide enters the leaves through small openings called stomata. The carbon is then trapped within the plant by energy-rich chemical bonds and, along with hydrogen, combines to form glucose. Light energy from the sun has now been transformed into chemical bond energy. Upon its release from the water molecules, oxygen exits the leaves through the stomata. | |
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Most of the carbon on Earth is recycled through a slow track that can take millions of years. As marine organisms die, their shells and skeletons become buried under layers of silt on the ocean floor and their carbon becomes part of sedimentary rock. When sediments covered marine organisms before they decomposed, the resulting heat and pressure caused huge deposits of petroleum (oil) to form. Millions of years ago the remains of plants became buried in sediments under swamps where they were compacted into coal. Today, these fossil fuels are the major energy source used by humans. Burning these fuels releases carbon back into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide that is then available for the fast track. |
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Vocabulary: photosynthesis
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