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Chapter 5: The Biogeochemical Cycles

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194657064biogeochemical cycleThe cycling of a chemical element through the biosphere; its pathways, storage locations, and chemical forms in living things, the atmosphere, hydrosphere, and geosphere
194657065carbon-silicate cyclea complex biogeochemical cycle over time scales as long as one half billion years. Included in this cycle are major geologic processes, such as weathering, transport by ground and surface waters, erosion, and deposition of crustal rocks. It is believed to provide important negative feedback mechanisms that control the temperature of the atmosphere
194657066carbon cyclecyclic movement of carbon in different chemical forms from the nonliving environment to the living environment and then back to the nonliving environment
194657067chemical reactiona change in which one or more substances are converted into different substances
194657068denitrificationconversion of nitrates in the soil by bacteria into nitrogen gas
194657069drainage basinthe area that contributes to surface runoff to a stream or river
194657070geologic cyclethe formation and destruction of earth materials and the processes responsible for these events. The geologic cycle includes the following substances: hydrologic, tectonic, rock, and geochemical
194657071hydrological cyclethe circulation of water from the oceans to the atmosphere and back to the oceans by way of evaporation, runoff from streams and rivers, and groundwater flow; also called the "water cycle"
194657072limiting factorsany biotic or abiotic factor that restricts the existence, numbers, reproduction, or distribution of organisms
194657073macronutrientschemical elements that organisms need in large amounts to live, grow, or reproduce. Examples are carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, phosphorus, sulfur, potassium, calcium, magnesium, and iron
194657074micronutrientschemical elements that organisms need in small or even trace amounts to live, grow, or reproduce. Examples are sodium, zinc, copper, chlorine, and iodine
194657075missing carbon sinksubstantial amounts of carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere but apparently not reabsorbed and thus remaining unaccounted for
194657076nitrogen cyclethe transfer of nitrogen from the atmosphere to the soil, to living organisms, and back to the atmosphere
194657077nitrogen fixationprocess in which bacteria convert atmospheric nitrogen gas into nitrogen compounds plants can use to make proteins
194657078phosphorus cyclethe movement of phosphorus atoms from rocks through the biosphere and hydrosphere and back to rocks
194657079plate tectonicsthe theory that explains how large pieces of the lithosphere, called plates, move and change shape
194657080rock cyclethe series of processes in which a rock forms, changes from one type to another, is destroyed, and forms again by geological processes
194657081tectonic cyclethe processes that change Earth's crust, producing external forms such as ocean basins, continents, and mountains

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