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296 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
296 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
# Unit 1
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# Unit 2
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## Chemistry Vocabulary List
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<table class="table" style="max-width=80%">
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<tr>
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<th>Word</th>
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<th>Definition (or diagram/translation)</th>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Particle Theory of Matter</td>
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<td>Theory that describes the composition and behaviour of matter as being composed of small particles with empty space</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Matter</td>
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<td>Substance that has mass and occupies space</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Mechanical Mixture</td>
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<td>A heterogeneous mixture which one can physically separate</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Suspension</td>
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<td>A heterogeneous mixture where insoluble solid particles are distributed throughout a fluid, floating freely/td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Alloy</td>
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<td>A combination of 2+ metals</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Mixture</td>
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<td>A substance that is made up of at least 2 types of particles</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Qualitative property</td>
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<td>A property of a substance that is not measured and doesn't have a numerical value, such as colour, odour, and texture</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Qualitative observation</td>
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<td>An numerical observation</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Precipitate</td>
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<td>A solid that separates from a solution</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Density</td>
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<td>A measure of how much mass is contained in a given unit volume of a substance; calculated by dividing the mass of a sample of its volume <b>(mass/volume)</b></td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Element</td>
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<td>Element An element is made up of the same atoms throughout, and cannot be broken down further</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Metal</td>
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<td>a solid material that is typically hard, shiny, malleable, fusible, and ductile, with good electrical and thermal conductivity</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Pure substance</td>
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<td>A substance that is made up of only one type of particle</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Atom</td>
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<td>The smallest unit of matter found in substances</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Solution</td>
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<td>A uniform mixture of 2 or more substances</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Colloid</td>
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<td>is substance with small particles suspended in it, unable to be separated by gravity</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Emulsion</td>
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<td>A mixture of 2 insoluble liquids, in which one liquid is suspended in the other</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Physical Property</td>
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<td>Characteristic of a substance that can be determined without changing the makeup of the substance</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Characteristic</td>
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<td>A physical property that is unique to a substance and can be used to identify the substance</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Periodic Table</td>
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<td>a table of the chemical elements arranged in order of atomic number, usually in rows, so that elements with similar atomic structure (and hence similar chemical properties) appear in vertical columns.</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Compound</td>
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<td>Compounds are chemically joined atoms of different elements</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Non-Metal</td>
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<td>A substance that isn’t a metal</td>
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</tr>
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</table>
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## Physical Properties
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- A characeristic of a substance that can be determined without changing the composition ("make-up") of that substance
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- Characteristics can be determinded using your 5 senses and measuring instruments
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- smell, taste, touch, hearing, sight
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- scales, tape, measuring meter
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## Qualitative and Quantitative Properties
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|Type|Definition|Example|
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|:---|:---------|:------|
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|Quantitative Property|A property that IS measured and has **```a numerical value```** |Ex. **```Temperature, height, mass, density```**|
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|Qualitative Property|A property that is NOT measured and has **```no numerical value```**|Ex. **```Colour, odor, texture```**|
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## Quantitative physical Properties
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- **```Density```**: amount of ```stuff``` (or mass) per unit volume (g/cm<sup>3</sup>)
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- **```Freezing Point```**: point where water solidifies (0<sup>o</sup>C)
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- **```Melting Point```**: point where water liquefies (0<sup>o</sup>C)
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- **```Boiling Point```**: point where liquid phase becomes gaseous (100<sup>o</sup>C)
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## Common Qualitative Physical Properties
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|Type|Definition|Example|
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|:---|:---------|:------|
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|Lustre|Shininess of dullness<br> Referred to as high or low lustre depending on the shininess||
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|Clarity|The ability to allow light through|```Transparent``` (Glass) <br>```Translucent``` (Frosted Glass) <br>```Opaque``` (Brick)|
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|Brittleness|Breakability or flexibility<br> Glass would be considered as brittle whereas slime/clay are flexible|
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|Viscosity|The ability of a liquid or gas to resist flow or not pour readily through<br> Refer to as more or less viscous|Molasses is more viscous, water is less (gases tend to get"thicker as heated; liquids get runnier)|
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|Hardness|The relative ability to scratch or be scratched by another substance<br> Referred to as high or low level of hardness| Can use a scale (1 is wax, 10 is diamond)|
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|Malleability|the ability of a substance ```to be hammered``` into a thinner sheet or molded|Silver is malleable<br> Play dough/pizza dough is less<br> glass is not malleable|
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|Ductility|the ability of a substance to be pulled into a finer strand|Pieces of copper can be drawn into thin wires, ductile|
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|Electrical Conductivity|The ability of a substance to allow electric current to pass through it<br> Refer to as high and low conductivity|Copper wires have high conductivity<br> Plastic has no conductivity|
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|Form: Crystalline Solid|Have their particles arranged in an orderly geometric pattern|Salt and Diamonods|
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|Form: Amorphous Solid|Have their particles randomly distributed without any long-range-pattern|Plastic, Glass, Charcoal|
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# Chemical Property
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- A characteristic (property) of a substance that describes its ability to undergo ```changes to its composition to produce one of more new substances. AKA BEHAVIOUR. Everything has one!```
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- ```Cannot be determined by physical properties```
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- E.g. ability of nails /cars to rust
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- Fireworks are explosive
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- Denim is resistant to soap, but is combustible
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- Baking soda reacts with vinegar and cake ingredients to rise
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- Bacterial cultures convert milk to cheese, grapes to wine, cocoa to chocolate
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- CLR used to clean kettles, showerheads because it breaks down minerals
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- Silver cleaner for tarnished jewellery, dishes because silver reacts with air to turn black
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# Elements
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- At the present time ```118``` elements are known.
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- These elements vary widely in their abundance
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- For example, only five elements account for over 90% of the Earth's crust: oxygen, silicon, aluminum, iron and calcium.
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## Naming of Ionic Bonds
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1. Write cation (metal) first
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2. Write anion (non-metal) second
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3. Change the ending of the non-metal to ```ide```.
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## Decomposition
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- A chemical change used to break compounds down into simpler substances
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- Energy must be ADDED
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- Using electricity
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- Adding thermal energy
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## Catalyst
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- Substance that accelerates a chemical change without being consumed OR changed itself
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## Uses of Hydrogen Peroxide
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- On cuts/scraps
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- Blood has a catalyst = see bubbling O<sub>2</sub>
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- Cleans contact lenses
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- Bubbling removes dirt
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- Bleaches
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- React with compounds that provide color
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- RESULT = no colour (bleach blond hair/teeth)
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# Unit 3: Biology
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## The Sphere's of Earth
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### Atmosphere
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- The layer of `gases` above Earth's surface, extending upward for hundreds of kilometers.
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- `78% nitrogen gas`.
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- `21% oxygen gas`.
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- `< 1% argon, water vapour, carbon dioxide & other gases`.
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- Critical to (almost all) life on Earth.
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- Acts like a **blanket & moderates surface temperature**.
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- Insulation prevents excessive **heating** during the day & **excessive cooling** during the night.
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- Average surface temperature droup from **15C to -18C**.
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- Blocks some **solar radiation (most ultraviolet light)**.
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### Biosphere
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- The regions of Earth where `living organisms` exist.
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- Describes **the locations in which life can exist within the lithosphere, atmosphere and hydrosphere**.
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- Biosphere is thin in comparison to diameter of the Earth.
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- ALL conditions required for **life must be met and maintained within this thin layer of ground, water, and nutrients to survive**.
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### Hydrosphere
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- All the `water` found on Earth, above and below the Earth's surface.
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- Includes
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- **Oceans**
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- **Lakes**
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- **Ice**
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- **Ground Water**
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- **Clouds**
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- 97% of water on Earth **is in the oceans**.
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### Lithosphere
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- The `hard part` of Earth's surface.
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- **Rocky outer shell of Earth**.
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- Consists of:
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- **Rocks and minerals that make up mountains, ocean floors, and Earth's solid landscape**
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-Thickness: **50 - 150km**.
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### Terms
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- `Biotic`: Living components (their remains AND features)
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- Bears, insects, micro-organisms, nests
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- `Abiotic`: Non-living components
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- Physical/chemical components
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- Temperature, wind, humidity, precipitation, minerals, air pressure
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- `Sustainability`: **The ability to maintain natural
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ecological conditions without interruption,
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weakening, or loss of value.**
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- `Population`
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- All of the individuals of a single species in a particular area
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- `Community`
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- Individual from all of the DIFFERENT populations (communities of different species)
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- `Ecosystem`
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- Term given to the community and its interactions with the abiotic environment
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- `Sustainable Ecosystem`
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- An ecosystem that is maintained through natural processes
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## Types of Energy
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- #### Radiant Energy
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- Energy that travels through EMPTY SPACE
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- #### Thermal Energy
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- Form of energy TRANSFERED DURING HEATING/COOLING
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- Keeps the Earth's surface warm
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- CANNOT provide organisms with energy to grow & function
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## Successions
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- `Succession`: The gradual and usually predictable changes in the composition of a community and the abiotic condtions following a disturbance.
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- ### Primary
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- on newly epxposed ground, such asa following a volcanic eruption.
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- ### Secondary
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- in a partially distrubed ecosystem, such as following a forest fire.
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- Human caused disturbances.
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#### Light Energy
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- VISIBLE forms of radiant energy
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- Can be used by some organisms (CANNOT be stored)
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#### Chemical Energy
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- Used by living organisms to perform functions (growth, reproduction, etc.)
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- MUST be replaced as it is used
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## It starts with the sun …
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- Energy radiates from the sun (UV)
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- Earth is hit with the UV or light energy
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- 70% of radiant energy is absorbed by `Hydrosphere` & `Lithosphere`
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- Converted into **thermal** energy
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- Warms the atmosphere, evaporates water & produces winds
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- What happens with the rest?
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- Approx. `30%` is reflected back into space
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- `0.023%` absorbed by living organisms through photosynthesis
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## Benefits of Succession
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- Provides a mechanism by which ecosysmtems maintain their long term sustainability.
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- Allows ecosystems to recover from natural or human caused distrubances.
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- Offers hope (New Orleans, New Jersey, Florida, Puerto Rica).
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- Time needed is very long.
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- Original cause o disturbance must be eliminated.
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- Not all disturbances can be repaired.
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- Disturbances can be repaired through humans actions that support the natural processes of succession.
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## Biodiversity
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- The variety
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-
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