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796 lines
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Markdown
796 lines
39 KiB
Markdown
# Unit 1: Science skills
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# Unit 2: Chemistry
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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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<tr>
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<td>Physical Change</td>
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<td>A change in which <b>the composition of the substance remains unaltered` and `no new substances are produced</b></td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Chemical Change</td>
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<td>A <b>change</b> in the starting substance and the <b>production of ONE or more new substances</b><br> Original substance does not disappear <b>BUT</b> the composition is rearranged</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Molecule</td>
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<td>Two or more <b>non-metal</b> atoms joined together</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Diatomic Molecules</td>
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<td>Molecules that <b>only</b> consists of 2 elements <br> `H O F BR I N CL` - `hyrodgen`, `oxygen`, `fluorine`, `bromine`, `iodine`, `nitrogen`, `chlorine`.</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Ions</td>
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<td>A Charged particle, that results from a <b>loss</b> (cation - positve, less electrons) or <b>gain</b> (anion - negative, more electrons) of electrons when bonding</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Electron</td>
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<td>Negatively Charged</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Proton</td>
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<td>Positively Charged</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Neutron</td>
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<td>Neutral Charged</td>
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</tr>
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<td>Ionic Charge</td>
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<td>The <b>sum</b> of the positive and negative charges in a ion</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Covalent Bond</td>
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<td>The sharing of electrons between atoms when bonding</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>Valence Electrons</td>
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<td>Number of electrons on the most outer orbit/shell of the element</td>
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</tr>
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</table>
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## Particle Theory of Matter
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1. Matter is made up of tiny particles.
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2. Particles of Matter are in constant motion.
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3. Particles of Matter are held together by very strong electrical forces.
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4. There are empty spaces between the particles of matter that are very large compared to the particles themselves.
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5. Each substance has unique particles that are different from the particles of other substances.
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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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## Density
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<img src="https://mathsmadeeasy.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/density-mass-volume-triangle.png" width="300">
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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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## Periodic Table
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<img src="https://chem.libretexts.org/@api/deki/files/121316/1.png?revision=1&size=bestfit&width=1300&height=693" width="1200">
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### Trends On The Periodic Table
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- The first column are the `Alkali metals`.
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- They are shiny, have the consitency of clay, and are easily cut with a knife.
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- They are the **most reactive** metals.
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- They react violently with water.
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- Alkali metals are **never found as free elements in nature**. They are always bonded with another element.
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- The second column are the `Alkaline earth metals`.
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- They are **never found uncombined in nature**.
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- The last column are the `Noble gases`.
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- **Extremely un-reactive**.
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- The second last column are the `Halogens`.
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- The **most reactive non-metals**
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- They **react with alkali metals to form salts**.
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- The middle parts are the `transition metals`.
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- They are good conductors of heat and electricity.
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- Usually bright coloured.
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- They have properties similar to elements in their same family
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- Many of them combine with oxygen to form compounds called oxides.
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- The rows outside the table are the `Inner tranistion metals`.
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<img src="https://files.catbox.moe/6522hg.png" width="600">
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- The **left** to the **staircase** are the metals and the **right** are the non-metals. The ones touching the **staircase** are the `metalloids`.
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<img src="http://www.sussexvt.k12.de.us/science/The%20Periodic%20Table/Periodic%20Trends_files/image002.jpg" width="300">
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### How To Read An Element
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<img src="https://www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/terc/content/investigations/es0501/images/es0501_p6_readinginfo_b.gif" width="400">
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## History of The Atom
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|Person|Description|Picture|
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|:-----|:----------|:------|
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|Democritus|All matter can be divided up into smaller pieces until it reaches an unbreakable particle called an ATOM (cannot be cut)<br>He proposed atoms are of diffent sizes, in constant motion and separated by empty spaces||
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|Aristole|- Rejected Democritus ideas, believed all matter was made up the 4 elements, it was accepted for nearly 2000 years|<img src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/ce/Four_elements_representation.svg/1227px-Four_elements_representation.svg.png" width="500">|
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|John Dalton|- Billbard model, atoms of **different elements are different**<br>Atoms are never **created or destroyed**.<br> - Atoms of an element are identical|<img src="https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcR-AsCpeBvgYIQMSWuGCG7-Rdb8z5QC9Jb92jnCO_nYkI4snYG7" width="500">|
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|JJ Thomson|- Atoms contain negatively charged electrons, since atoms are neutral, the **rest of the atom is a positevly charged sphere**. <br> - Negatively charged electrons were **evenly distrubuted** throughout the atom.<br> - **Ray cathode experiment** - basically atoms were attracted to a postive end of the tube, so there most be negative charges in the atoms. <br> <br> <img src="https://study.com/cimages/multimages/16/thomsonexperiment2.png" width="300">|<img src="https://www.electrical4u.com/images/march16/1468862016.png" width="500">|
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|Ernest Rutherford|- Discovered that the postively charged **nucleus**. <br> - The nucleus was **surrounded by a cloud of negatively charged electrons**<br> - Most of the atom was just space. <br> - **Gold foil experiement**, alpha particles (postively charged) shot at atom, some bounced off at weird angles, so there most be a postively charged thing there. <br> <br> <img src="http://historyoftheatom.files.wordpress.com/2015/02/gold-foil.jpg" width="300">|<img src="http://atomicmodeltimelinervmf.weebly.com/uploads/1/7/9/9/17998887/1823773_orig.jpg" width="500">|
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|Niels Bohr|- Discovered that electrons **orbit the nucleus in fixed paths**, each electron has a **definite** amount of energy, further from nucles = more energy.<br> - Electrons **cannot** jump orbit to orbit or release energy as light going down. <br> - Each orbit can hold a specifc amount of electrons, `2,8,8,2`, useful for the first 20 elements|<img src="https://s3.amazonaws.com/rapgenius/Bohr%20Atom.png" width="500">|
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|James Chadwick|- Discovered the neutron, mass of neutron = mass of proton (basically)<br> - Neutral atoms have **equal numbers** of protons and electrons.|<img src="https://01a4b5.medialib.edu.glogster.com/I28dU77RETpL5o21KLw0/media/43/432f51edf42bbf2082e35268160b789a7344a49f/screen-shot-2014-11-15-at-9-10-48-am.png" width="500">|
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## Carbon
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## Atoms
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- Subscripts - tells us how many of the atom are there, for example N<sub>2</sub> means there are 2 nitrongen atoms.
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- Use distrubutive property if there are brackets and a subscript, for example, (CO)<sub>2</sub> is equilivant to C<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>.
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- Atoms are stable if they have a full valence shell (noble gases)
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- Each family has the same amount of valence electrons as their family number, so `alkali metals` would have 1 valence electron, `alkaline earth metals` will have 2, `halogens will have` 7 and `noble gases` would have 8.
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- They will also have the same amount of protons as their `atomic number`.
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- **Number of protons = Number of electrons**.
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- **Number of neutrons = mass - atomic number/number of protons**.
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## Bohr-Rutherford / Lewis-Dot Diagrams
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- **Bohr-Rutherford**
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- Draw nucleus, and draw the apprioate number of orbits.
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- Put number of **protons** and **neutrons** in the nucleus.
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- Draw the correct number of electrons in each orbit
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<img src="https://d2jmvrsizmvf4x.cloudfront.net/LHJtmeuTDVQ4l2uelrkw_imgres.png" width="300">
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- **Lewis-Dot Diagrams**
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- Draw element symbol
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- Put the right number of valence electrons around the symbol, perferably in pairs
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<img src="https://qph.fs.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-a7b2f5ac4b313c27d4bac65c1c8f0a30.webp" width="300">
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### Bonding
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- To combine 2 atoms, each element wants to be stable. So they each want a full valence shell, (outer shell) so they are stable.
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- They can either `gain`, `lose` or `share` electrons in order to become stable.
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- Example:
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- Oxygen and Hydrogen, in order to become stable, they all need 8 valence electrons. Hydrogen has 1, oxygen has 6, so we bring in another hyrdogen and we let them share all their electrons, turning into H<sub>2</sub>O, or water.
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<img src="https://www.seaturtlecamp.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/water-molecule-2.gif" width="300">
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- Use **arrows** to show gaining or losing electrons.
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- **Circle** to show sharing of electrons.
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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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<img src="https://files.catbox.moe/014ff4.png" width="500">
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<br>
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<img src="https://files.catbox.moe/3nn8kx.png" width="505">
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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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## Terms
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- `Habitat`: Placce where organisms live
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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 ecological conditions without interruption, weakening, or loss of value.**
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- `Community`: Individual from all of the DIFFERENT populations (communities of different species)
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- `Ecosystem`: Term given to the community and its interactions with the abiotic environment
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- `Sustainable Ecosystem`: An ecosystem that is maintained through natural processes
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- `Ecological niche`: Every species interacts with other species and with its environment in a unique way. This is its role in an ecosystem (e.g. what it eats, what eats it, how it behaves, etc.)
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- `Biodiversity`: The variety of life in a particular ecosystem, also known as biological diversity.
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- Canada is home to about 140 000 to 200 000 species of plants and animals. Only 71 000 have been identified.
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- `Species Richness`: the number of species in an area.
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- Diverse ecosystem = high species richness.
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- Higher close to the equator.
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- Ex. Amazon rainforest home to more than 200 species of hummingbirds, Ontario only has a single species.
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- `Population`: A group of organisms of one species that interbreed and live in the same place and time.
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- Population often change due to both **natural and artifical** factors (human activity).
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- `Carry Capcity`: The maximum population size of a **particular species** that a given ecosystem can sustain.
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- `Pollution`: harmful comtaminants released into the enviornment.
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- `Bioremediation`: the use of micro-organisms to consume and break down environmental pollutants.
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- `Photosynthesis`: The process in which the Sun’s energy (LIGHT) is converted (put together with) into chemical energy AS GLUCOSE (sugar).
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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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- `Producer`: Organism that makes its own energy-rich food using the Sun’s energy.
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- `Consumer`: Organism that obtains its energy from consuming other organisms.
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- `Eutrophication`: Overfertilzation of staganat bodies of water with nutrients
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- `Heterotrophs` Organisms that feed on others
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- `Bioaccumulation`: The process by which **toxins accumulate in the bodies** of animals. (Eg, DDT). **They cannot be easily excreted from the body.**
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- `Bioamplification`: The **increase in concentration of a substance** such as a pesticide as we move up trophic level within a food web. **It happens because of bioaccumulation**. (Sometimes called `biomagnification`).
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- `Oligotrophic` Bodies of water that are **low** in nutrients. (clear water, opposite to `eutrophic`).
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- `Watershed` (drainage basin): Area of land where **ALL WATER** drains to a single river or lake.
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- `Invasive Species`: A non-native species whose intentional or accidental introduction negatively impacts the natural environment.
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## The Spheres 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
|
||
- All the `water` found on Earth, above and below the Earth's surface.
|
||
- Includes
|
||
- **Oceans**
|
||
- **Lakes**
|
||
- **Ice**
|
||
- **Ground Water**
|
||
- **Clouds**
|
||
- 97% of water on Earth **is in the oceans**.
|
||
|
||
|
||
### Lithosphere
|
||
- The `hard part` of Earth's surface.
|
||
- **Rocky outer shell of Earth**.
|
||
- Consists of:
|
||
- **Rocks and minerals that make up mountains, ocean floors, and Earth's solid landscape**
|
||
-Thickness: **50 - 150km**.
|
||
|
||
|
||
## Energy Flow
|
||
- `Law of Conservation of Energy`: Energy **can not** be **created** or **destroyed**. It can only be transformed or transfeered.
|
||
- Note that Photosynthesis and Cellular respiration are nearly **THE EXACT OPPOSITE**.
|
||
### Types of Energy
|
||
- #### Radiant Energy
|
||
- Energy that travels through EMPTY SPACE
|
||
- #### Thermal Energy
|
||
- Form of energy TRANSFERED DURING HEATING/COOLING
|
||
- Keeps the Earth's surface warm
|
||
- CANNOT provide organisms with energy to grow & function
|
||
- #### Light Energy
|
||
- VISIBLE forms of radiant energy
|
||
- Can be used by some organisms (CANNOT be stored)
|
||
- #### Chemical Energy
|
||
- Used by living organisms to perform functions (growth, reproduction, etc.)
|
||
- MUST be replaced as it is used
|
||
|
||
### Photosynthesis
|
||
- Plants use the sun to make energy in the form of glucose or sugar.
|
||
- Animals cannot make their own food (glucose, energy)
|
||
- Must get our food from plants.
|
||
- Plants are the first step in the food chain
|
||
- Oxygen released during photosynthesis is necessary for all living things
|
||
|
||
### Cellular Respiration
|
||
- Process of converting sugar into carbon dioxide, water and energy
|
||
- Makes stored energy available for use
|
||
- Takes place in the mitochondria
|
||
|
||
1. Original energy stored in the sugar is released
|
||
2. Occurs continuously
|
||
3. Does NOT require light energy
|
||
|
||
- **BOTH** producers **AND** consumers perform cellular respiration
|
||
|
||
- ALL humans are consumers (unless you’re the hulk)
|
||
|
||
#### Steps in Cellular Respiration
|
||
- Mitochondria takes in nutrients
|
||
- Glucose and Oxygen
|
||
- Breaks both nutrients down
|
||
- Creates energy for the cell
|
||
- #### REVERSE of Photosynthesis
|
||
- Sugar breaks down into **CARBON DIOXIDE** and **WATER**
|
||
- Release of energy when this happens
|
||
|
||
|
||
## Feeding Relationships
|
||
- Energy flow through an ecosystem in one direction, from the sun or inorganic compounds to autotrophs (producers) and then to various hetrotrophs (consumers).
|
||
- Food are a series of steps in which organisms transfers energy by eating or eaten (pg. 43).
|
||
- Food webs show the complex interactions within an ecosystem (pg. 44).
|
||
- Each step in a food chain or web is called a `trophic` level. Producers make up the first step, consumers make up the higher levels. E.g. first trophic level are producers, second trophic level are primary consumers, etc.
|
||
- Detrivores + scavengers are off to side (with all arrows pointing on it.
|
||
- **First Trophic Level**: `Plants`.
|
||
- `10% rule`, Only 10% of energy is stored in each organism, 90% of energy is lost (heat consumption).
|
||
|
||
## Ecological Pyramids
|
||
- Food chains and food webs do not give any information about the numbers of organisms involved.
|
||
- This information can be shown through ecological pyramids.
|
||
- An ecological pyramid is a diagram that shows the amount of energy or matter contained within each trophic level in a food web or food chain.
|
||
|
||
<img src="https://www.tutorialspoint.com/environmental_studies/images/upright_pyramid.jpg" width="300">
|
||
|
||
|Pyramid|Description|Picture|
|
||
|:------|:----------|:------|
|
||
|Pyramid of Biomass|Show the **total** amout of `living tissue` available at each `trophic` level. This shows the amount of tissue available for the next `trophic` level. <br> <br> Biomass is preferred to the use of numbers of organisms because individual organisms can vary in size. It is the `total mass` **(not the size)** that is important. Sometimes it’s inverted. <br> <br> Pyramid of biomass records the total dry organic matter of organisms at each trophic level in a given area of an ecosystem.|<img src="http://earth.rice.edu/mtpe/bio/biosphere/topics/energy/biomass_pyramid.gif" width="800">
|
||
|Numbers Pyramids|Shows the number of organisms at each trophic level per unit area of an ecosystem. <br> <br> Because each trophic level harvests only about `one tenth` of the energy from the level below, it can support only about one `10th` the amount of living tissue. <br> <br> **`Can be inverted`**: 1 large tree supports thousands of organisms living on it <br> <br> Pyramid of numbers displays the number of individuals annualy.|<img src="https://d321jvp1es5c6w.cloudfront.net/sites/default/files/imce-user-gen/pyramidnumbers2.png" width="400">|
|
||
|Energy Pyramid|Shows the amount of energy input to each trophic level in a given area of an ecosystem over an extended period.<br> <br> **CANNOT** be inverted, due to energy transfers<br> <br> **Only 10% of the energy available within one trophic level is transferred to organisms at the next trophic level.**|<img src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3a/Ecological_Pyramid.svg/1200px-Ecological_Pyramid.svg.png" width="500">|
|
||
|
||
**NOTE FOR ENERGY PYRAMIDS**: In nature, ecological
|
||
efficiency varies from `5%` to `20%` energy available between successive trophic levels (`95%` to `80%` loss). About 10% efficiency is a general rule. `Rule of 10’s` at each level.
|
||
|
||
## Cycles
|
||
|
||
|Cycle|Picture|
|
||
|:----|:------|
|
||
|Water Cycle|<img src="https://www.noaa.gov/sites/default/files/styles/scale_crop_1120x534/public/thumbnails/image/watercycle_rc.png?itok=CcUyhuxd" width="800">|
|
||
|Carbon Cycle|<img src="http://climatechangenationalforum.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/carbon_cycle_1.jpg" width="700">|
|
||
|Nitrogen Cycle|<img src="https://i.pinimg.com/originals/95/e6/d2/95e6d2b0e43e826e2d811d894103d94e.jpg" width="700">|
|
||
|
||
## Water Cycle
|
||
- Continuous movement of water on, above and below the surface of the Earth
|
||
### Key Terms:
|
||
- Water moves from one reservoir to another (ocean to
|
||
atmosphere, river to lake)
|
||
- Evaporation, Condensation, Precipitation, Percolation (Infiltration, water seeping into ground), Run-off, transpiration (plants losing water to air)
|
||
- Forms: Solid (ice), Liquid (water), Gas (vapour)
|
||
|
||
### STEPS/PROCESS:
|
||
- Exchange of energy leads to:
|
||
- Temperature Change, Climate
|
||
- Condenses 🡪 occurs during cooler temp
|
||
- Evaporation 🡪 happens during warmer temp
|
||
- **Evaporation**:
|
||
- purifies the water
|
||
- New fresh water for the land
|
||
- **Flow of liquid water and ice**
|
||
- Transports minerals across the globe
|
||
- **Reshaping the geological features of Earth**
|
||
- Erosion and sedimentation
|
||
|
||
### Human Inpacts
|
||
- Humans building dams (flooding is a problem!)
|
||
- Deforestation contributes to global warming, hence melting glaciers and causing flooding in cities
|
||
- (Also less transpiration from clear cutting) – pg. 48
|
||
- Factories and cars pollute the air, leading to acid precipitation
|
||
- Oil spills destroy aquatic ecosystems
|
||
|
||
## Carbon Cycle
|
||
- Fourth most abundant element in universe
|
||
- Building block of all living things
|
||
- Main Pathway – in and out of living matter
|
||
-
|
||
|
||
### STEPS/PROCESSES
|
||
- All living organisms contain carbon.
|
||
- CO<sub>2</sub> is a waste product of cellular respiration
|
||
- Plants use carbon dioxide and water to form simple sugars (photosynthesis)
|
||
- Light Energy --> Chemical Energy
|
||
- Carbon dioxide is `returned to the enviornment by:
|
||
1. `Resipiration` in plants, animals & micro-organisms.
|
||
2. `Decay` caused by micro-organisms (decompoers).
|
||
3. `Combustion` i.e. Burning fossil fuels.
|
||
- **Phtosynthesis**
|
||
- CO<sub>2</sub> is converted to glucose using water and sunlight
|
||
- **Cellular Respiration**
|
||
- Breaks down glucose to release energy, expel CO<sub>2</sub>
|
||
- **Oceans are a HUGE carbon sink**.
|
||
|
||
<img src="https://www.news-medical.net/image.axd?picture=2017%2F6%2Fshutterstock_581980219.jpg" width="500">
|
||
|
||
### Human Impacts
|
||
- **Mining & burning fossil fuels**: Speed up release of CO<sup>2</sub> to the atmosphere.
|
||
- **Deforestation & clearing vegetation**: ↑ CO<sub>2</sub> in atmosphere.
|
||
- **Acid rain**: release CO<sub>2</sub> from limestone.
|
||
- CO<sub>2</sub> in the atmosphere is now higher than it has been in at least **800 000 years**.
|
||
|
||
## Nitrogen Cycle
|
||
- The most abudant gas in the atmopshere (~78%)
|
||
- `Nitrogen Fixation`: The process that causes the strong two-atom nitrogen molecules found in the atmopshere to break apart so they can combine with other atoms.
|
||
- `Nitrogen gets fixed`: Whenit is combined with oxygen or hydrogen.
|
||
- An essential component of DNA, RNA, and protenis - the building blocks of life.
|
||
- Atmopspheric nitrogen = N<sub>2</sub>
|
||
- Most living organisms are `unable` to use this form of nitrogen
|
||
- Therefore, must be **converted** to a usable form!
|
||
### STEPS/PROCESSES
|
||
<img src="https://image.slidesharecdn.com/lab-11methodsforestimatingdenitrificationprocess-130414125752-phpapp01/95/lab11-methods-for-estimating-denitrification-process-4-638.jpg?cb=1365944316" witdh="100">
|
||
|
||
### Nitrogen Fixation
|
||
- Most of the nitrogen used by living things is taken from the atmosphere by certain bacteria in a process called `nitrogen fixation`.
|
||
- These microorganisms convert nitrogen gas into a variety of nitrogen containing compounds such as nitrates, nitrites, and ammonia
|
||
- Lightning and UV radiation also fix small amounts of it
|
||
- Humans add nitrogen to soil through fertilizer
|
||
- 3 ways nitrogen to get fixed
|
||
1. Atmopheric Fixation
|
||
- Lightning Storms
|
||
- stroms and fuel burning in car engines produce nitrates, which are washed by rain into soil water.
|
||
2. Industrial Fixation
|
||
3. Biological Fixation
|
||
- 2 types
|
||
1. Free living Bacteria
|
||
- Highly specialized bacteria live in the soil and have the ability to combine atmospheric nitrogen with hydrogen to make ammonium(NH<sub>4</sub><sup>+</sup>).
|
||
- Nitrogen changes into ammonium.
|
||
2. Symbiotic Relationship Bacteria
|
||
- Bacteria live in the roots of legume family plants and provide the plants with ammonium(NH<sub>4</sub><sup>+</sup>) in exchange for the plant's carbon and a protected biome.
|
||
- `Nitrites` are absorbed by plant roots and converted to plant protein.
|
||
- `Nitrates` **can be absorbed by other plants** to continue the cycle.
|
||
- `Denitrifying bacteria` convert soil nitrates into N<sub>2</sub> gas
|
||
- This is a `loss` of N<sub>2</sub> from the cycle
|
||
|
||
### Human Impacts
|
||
- Nitrates also `enters` the cycle **through the addition of nitrogen rich fertilizers to the soil** – made industrially from nitrogen gas (Eutrophication – pg. 60)
|
||
- Factories release NO compounds (acid rain)
|
||
|
||
## Nutrient Recycling
|
||
- There is a `limited` amount of `nutrients` on earth
|
||
- e.g. you are probably aware of the water cycle – where water is
|
||
constantly being `recycled` in nature.
|
||
- There are similar cycles for all nutrients.
|
||
- When plants and animals die, their nutrient content is `not wasted`.
|
||
- Bacteria and fungi decompose the remains and release the nutrients back into the abiotic environment (i.e. into the soil, nearby water and air).
|
||
- Nutrients are then taken up by other plants and used to make new organic material.
|
||
- This material is passed on down the food chains and is reused by all the chain members.
|
||
- When death occurs for these members, the nutrients are again returned to the abiotic environment and the cycling of nutrients continues in this circular way.
|
||
- This ensures that there is no real longterm drain on the Earth’s nutrients, despite millions of years of plant and animal activity.
|
||
|
||
|
||
## Changes In Population
|
||
- The carry capcacity of an ecosystem depends on numerous biotic and abiotic factors.
|
||
- These can be classified into two categories.
|
||
1. `Density dependent factors`
|
||
2. `Density independent factors`
|
||
|
||
### Density Independent Factors
|
||
- DIF’s can affect a population no matter what its density is. The effect of the factor (such as weather) on the size of the population **does not** depend on the **original size** of the population.
|
||
- Examples:
|
||
- unusual weather
|
||
- natural disasters
|
||
- seasonal cycles
|
||
- certain human activities—such as damming rivers and clear-cutting forests
|
||
|
||
### Density Dependent Factors
|
||
- DDF’s affect a population **ONLY** when it reaches a certain size. The effect of the factor (such as disease) on the size of the population depends on the **original size** of the population
|
||
- Examples:
|
||
- Competition
|
||
- Predation
|
||
- Parasitism
|
||
- Disease
|
||
|
||
## Relationships
|
||
1. **Symbiosis**
|
||
- Two different organisms associate with each other in a close way.
|
||
- Is the interaction between members of `two different species` that live together in a close association.
|
||
- **Mutualism (+/+)**
|
||
- Both species benefit from the relationship.
|
||
- (eg. human intestine and good bacteria, bees and flowers, clownfish and sea anemone, cattle egret and cow).
|
||
- **Commensalism (+/0)**
|
||
- one species benefits, the other is **unaffected**.
|
||
- (eg. beaver cutting down trees, whales and barancles).
|
||
- **Parasitism (-/+)**
|
||
- one species is harmed, the other **benefits**.
|
||
- (eg. lice and humans, mosquito and humans).
|
||
- **Competition (-/-)**
|
||
- neither species benefits. Can be harmed. (-/-).
|
||
- **Neutralism (0/0)**
|
||
- both species are unaffected (unlikely).
|
||
- True neutralism is extremely unlikely or even impossible to prove. One cannot assert positively that there is absolutely no competition between or benefit to either species.
|
||
- Example: fish and dandelion
|
||
|
||
<table class="table" style="max-width:80%">
|
||
<tr>
|
||
<th><b>+</b></th>
|
||
<td><b>Parasitism and Predation</b></td>
|
||
<td><b>Commensalism</b></td>
|
||
<td><b>Mutalism</b></td>
|
||
</tr>
|
||
<tr>
|
||
<th><b>0</b></th>
|
||
<td></td>
|
||
<td><b>Neutralism</b></td>
|
||
<td><b>Commensalism</b></td>
|
||
</tr>
|
||
<tr>
|
||
<th><b>-</b></th>
|
||
<td><b>Competition</b></td>
|
||
<td></td>
|
||
<td><b>Parasitism and Predation</b></td>
|
||
</tr>
|
||
<tr>
|
||
<th></th>
|
||
<th><b>-</b></th>
|
||
<th><b>0</b></th>
|
||
<th><b>+</b></th>
|
||
</tr>
|
||
</table>
|
||
|
||
2. **Competition**
|
||
- Individuals compete for limited resources
|
||
- Types
|
||
- **Intraspecific Competition**
|
||
- Is the competition between individuals of the **same** species.
|
||
- (eg. male deer uses antlers to fight each other for mates, little herons compete for food).
|
||
- **Interspecific Competition**
|
||
- Is the competition between individuals of **different** species.
|
||
- (eg. cardinals and blue jays at a bird feeder, lions and hyenas competing for food).
|
||
|
||
3. **Predation**
|
||
- One animal eats (kills) another
|
||
|
||
### Reasons To Compete
|
||
- Food and water.
|
||
- Space (habitat).
|
||
- Mates.
|
||
|
||
## Candian Biomes
|
||
<img src="https://slideplayer.com/slide/12708159/76/images/41/Canada%E2%80%99s+Biomes+Mountain+Forest+Tundra+Boreal+Forest+Grassland.jpg" width="800">
|
||
|
||
### Tundra
|
||
* Most **NORTHERN** biome of Canada.
|
||
* Low temperatures + lots of **PERMAFROST**
|
||
* Low decomposition rate.
|
||
* Plants grow slower due to cold
|
||
* `Species`: Polar bears, Caribou, Arctic foxes.
|
||
|
||
### Boreal Forest
|
||
* **Largest** biome in Canada.
|
||
* Warmer weather+plenty rainfall.
|
||
* Acidic Soil - Limits variety of plants + slows down decomposition.
|
||
* `Species` Grey wolves, conifers, moss, black bears.
|
||
|
||
### Grassland
|
||
* Moderate rainfall (supports grass not trees).
|
||
* Dry $`\rightarrow`$ Fire $`\rightarrow`$ Fire prevents larges trees from growing.
|
||
* Very **Fertile** black soil (high decomposition rate)
|
||
* Large portions of this biome are replaced by farms in Canada.
|
||
* `Species`: Bison, Snakes, fescue grasses, voles.
|
||
|
||
### Temperate Deciduous Forest
|
||
* Layers of canopy trees, understorey trees, shrubs, ground vegetation.
|
||
* Variety oof plants + species.
|
||
* Fast decomposition rate (warm temperatures).
|
||
* Large portions of this biome used by humans for cities.
|
||
* `Species`: Shrews, decidious trees, deer, black bears.
|
||
|
||
### Mountain Forest
|
||
* Temperatures vary with elevation
|
||
* Windy + cool summers
|
||
* Heavy precipitation on leeward side of mountains
|
||
* `Species` Elk, cougar, large coniferous trees, ferns.
|
||
|
||
## Introducing Ecosystems
|
||
- Most ecosystems are **SUSTAINABLE**.
|
||
### Ecosystem Services
|
||
- **Cultural Services**
|
||
- Benefits relating to our enjoyment of the environment.
|
||
- Ex. Recreational, aesthetic and spiritual experiences when we interact with natural surroundings.
|
||
- Ecotourism: tourists engage in environmentally responsible travel to relatively undisturbed natural areas.
|
||
- Ex. Canada’s Wilderness.
|
||
- **Ecosystem Products**
|
||
- Humans use products produced by the ecosystem.
|
||
- Hunt animals and harvest plants, lakes/oceans supply us with seafood.
|
||
- **Terrestrial:** ecosystems: medicines, fibres, rubber and dyes.
|
||
- **Forestry**: largest industries and employers.
|
||
|
||
- Regulate and maintain important abiotic and biotic features of environment.
|
||
- Cycle water, oxygen, and nutrients.
|
||
- Help protect us from physical threats.
|
||
- Plant communities protect the soil from wind and water erosion.
|
||
- Ecosystems act as sponges.
|
||
- Absorb water and slowly release it into the groundwater and surface water (reduces erosion and protects against flooding, filters the water).
|
||
- Protect land from storms along coasts where wave damage erodes the shoreline.
|
||
- Mangroves
|
||
|
||
#### Monetary Value of Ecosystem Services
|
||
|
||
- Very difficult to put a dollar value to it.
|
||
- Dollar value of cleaning the air/water, moderating climate and providing paper fibre, medicines and other products is HIGH.
|
||
- Ranges into the trillions of dollars/year (maybe 60 trillion?).
|
||
- Provides valuable services that are free and renewable.
|
||
|
||
|
||
### Successions
|
||
- Natural ecosystems are in a state of equilibrium (their biotic and abiotic features remain relatively constant over time).
|
||
- Equilibrium is established when abiotic conditions are stable.
|
||
- Photosynthesis and cellular respiration are balanced.
|
||
- Populations are healthy and stable.
|
||
- Small ecosystems are in a constant state of change.
|
||
- Forest fire or disease outbreak can cause short-term changes on a local level.
|
||
- Types
|
||
- #### Primary
|
||
- on newly epxposed ground, such asa following a volcanic eruption.
|
||
- #### Secondary
|
||
- in a partially distrubed ecosystem, such as following a forest fire.
|
||
- Human caused disturbances.
|
||
- Results in gradual changes as plants, animals, fungi and micro organisms become established in an area.
|
||
- In both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems.
|
||
|
||
#### Benefits of Succession
|
||
- Provides a mechanism by which ecosystems maintain their long term sustainability.
|
||
- Allows ecosystems to recover from natural or human caused disturbances.
|
||
- Offers hope (New Orleans, New Jersey, Florida, Puerto Rico).
|
||
- Time needed is very long.
|
||
- Original cause of disturbance must be eliminated.
|
||
- Not all disturbances can be repaired.
|
||
- Disturbances can be repaired through human actions that support the natural processes of succession.
|
||
|
||
|
||
### Human Impacts To Species
|
||
- Increase rate of **EXTINCT** species.
|
||
- HIPPO
|
||
- Habitat destruction + fragmentation (divide lands into pieces)
|
||
- Invasive species.
|
||
- Pollution + pesticides.
|
||
- Over Population
|
||
- Overexploitation (overfishing, overhunting etc).
|
||
|
||
#### Status of Endangered Life in Canda
|
||
- Do not have to be driven to extinction for there to be ecological consequences.
|
||
- Population falls below critical level = ecological niche can no longer be filled.
|
||
- Consequences for abiotic and biotic features.
|
||
- **Extirpated**: no longer exists in a specific area.
|
||
- **Endangered**: facing imminent extirpation or extinction.
|
||
- **Threatened**: likely to become endangered if factors reducing its survival are not changed.
|
||
- **Special Concern**: may become threatened or endangered because of a combination of factors.
|
||
|
||
### Eutrophication
|
||
#### The Problem
|
||
- Lack or no dissolved oxygen, produces toxic algae, ugly.
|
||
- Colour, smell, and water treatment problems.
|
||
- Animal waste = nutrients.
|
||
- Examples
|
||
- Parks in china.
|
||
- Hanoi, vietnam.
|
||
|
||
#### Solutions
|
||
- Water cycling, through the use of watermills or waterfalls.
|
||
- People removing decomposing plants, collecting waste/garabage.
|
||
- Aerator.
|
||
|
||
### Resource Management
|
||
#### Forestry Practices
|
||
- Canadian economy rely heavily on forests.
|
||
- Difficult to find a balance between commerical demands and ecological integrity.
|
||
- Forest certifications are given to people that use safe practices
|
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### Wildlife Management
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- **`Stewardship`** (sustainable harvesting) must always be remembered!
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- Inuit people had small populations and knew how their enviornments worked, European settlers changed all of that!
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