hydrosphere in English

noun
1
all the waters on the earth's surface, such as lakes and seas, and sometimes including water over the earth's surface, such as clouds.
Oxygen also occurs in the hydrosphere in the form of water, of which it makes up nearly 89% by weight, and in the Earth's crust.

Use "hydrosphere" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "hydrosphere" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "hydrosphere", or refer to the context using the word "hydrosphere" in the English Dictionary.

1. The totality of the atmosphere, hydrosphere, biosphere and geosphere.

2. These dissolved materials thus pass from the lithosphere to the hydrosphere.

3. Abiotic factors/components originate from the lithosphere, hydrosphere and atmosphere.

4. Good ventilation and be beneficial for hydrosphere reeked, an keep foot clean and comfortable.

5. Geosphere, hydrosphere and atmosphere are fluids in motion; their main difference is their viscosity.

6. Its physical properties shape the hydrosphere and are an essential part of the water cycle and climate.

7. The Earth Surface System is a complicated system which includes geosphere , atmosphere, hydrosphere and biosphere.

8. The biosphere occupies those parts of the atmosphere, hydrosphere, and geosphere where life is found.

9. By far the greater part of the hydrosphere, of course, is the ocean basins.

10. The Biophysical Interaction model uses the interactions between the Atmosphere, Lithosphere, Hydrosphere and Biosphere to describe as ecosystem

11. No lunar atmosphere or hydrosphere exists, nor has any existed for its entire span of recorded history.

12. The materials in the atmosphere and hydrosphere are added to those of the 10 - mile zone.

13. The carbon cycle is the cycle in which carbon is exchanged between the hydrosphere, atmosphere, biosphere, and geosphere of the Earth.

14. 12 The early Proterozoic atmosphere and hydrosphere are similar to those of Archaeozoic in being still absent in oxygen.

15. The earth is a multi-layered rotating system, which is mainly made up of aerosphere, hydrosphere, lithosphere, mantle, outer core and inner core.

16. The carbon cycle is the cycle in which carbon is exchanged between the hydrosphere, atmosphere, biosphere(Sentence dictionary), and geosphere of the Earth.

17. The Biogeochemical cycle or cycling of substances is a pathway by which a chemical substance continuously moves through biotic (biosphere) and abiotic (atmosphere, lithosphere, and hydrosphere) components of Earth

18. Earth's hydrosphere consists chiefly of the oceans, but technically includes all water surfaces in the world, including inland seas, lakes, rivers, and underground waters down to a depth of 2,000 m (6,600 ft).

19. The Smithsonian Science Education Center (SSEC) has announced the release of “Aquation: The Freshwater Access Game.” “Aquation” is a single-player digital-strategy game that enables students to study the science that guides the hydrosphere as it …

20. Climatology is an integrative science focusing on interactions between energy and mass flows among the atmosphere, hydrosphere, lithosphere, biosphere, and cryosphere and on the increasing impact of human activities—both inadvertent and intentional—on climate from local through regional to global scales

21. The society aims at: promoting the sciences about the atmosphere and hydrosphere, in particular aeronomy, glaciology, oceanography, climatology, meteorology and atmospheric physics and chemistry; included also is the application of all these disciplines to other planets. supporting especially young researchers, by offering a platform for exchange about progress in the atmospheric sciences.

22. Despite the likely increased volcanism and existence of many smaller tectonic "platelets," it has been suggested that between 4.4 and 4.3 Ga (billion years), the Earth was a water world, with little if any continental crust, an extremely turbulent atmosphere and a hydrosphere subject to intense ultraviolet (UV) light, from a T Tauri stage Sun, cosmic radiation and continued bolide impacts.