Thursday, April 30, 2009

Where We Get Our Water From


About 75% of the water we receive comes from mountain springs in the areas of Aspen, Lead ville and Breckenridge – Colorado. Pipes that transfer this water to reservoirs like rampart and catamount are at the least 10.6 miles in distance.Walking time would be about 1 day and 6 hours. Rampart is a 500 surface acre lake between the US Air Force Academy and Woodland Park. Catamount is a 210 surface acre lake on the North slope of Pikes Peak. From the reservoirs, the water is transfered to water treatment plants before it is received in homes. There are 5 local water sources: Pikes Peak Northern and Southern slopes, Cheyenne Creeks, Fountain Creek, Peakview Reservoir in Monument, and Northfield Watershed. Then there are 4 local ground water sources: Arapahoe (4wells), Denver (1well), Laramie-Fox Hills (1 well), and Widefield (4wells). From these treatment plants, the plant distributes the water to the many homes in the city of Colorado Springs and the border to border cities. Such as Manitou Springs, and Breckenridge.

-Jenna&Grace :)

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

The Water Cycle

1. What is the water cycle?

The water cycle is a continuous process in which water moves through the environment.

2. Does the water cycle have a beginning or end?


The water cycle doesn't have a beginning or end because it is a continuous cycle.

3. Starting with a puddle on a sunny day, describe how water might move through the water cycle and eventually fall back as rain.

If there is a puddle laying on the ground and a hot, summer, sunny day there are a few steps that it must go through before it reaches Earth again. The water will first evaporate. After the water evaporates it goes through a condensation stage. After condensation comes precipitation. This is where the water will fall back to Earth.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

The Great Pacific Garbage Patch

Animated Bibliograpy

-http://www.greatgarbagepatch.org/

I used this website to help me understand more about the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. It helped me understand the amount of unwanted biodegradable plastic in the ocean. Only a few weeks ago did I first hear about this garbage patch. This was the first out of four websites that I looked up to research the Great Pacific Garbage Patch and I was amazed. How can so much garbage be in the ocean and were still not doing anything about it? I used a lot of useful information from the website in my presentation.

-http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-the-great-pacific-garbage-patch.htm

The website shown above helped me understand even more about the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. It also showed me how much pollution there is in the ocean. Its intoxicating the water and rapidly killing variates of marine life. Animals will eat this plastic and then, since it is biodegradable, it does not digest. It gets stuck in the animals stomachs and they can end up dying. I used this information in my presentation to help explain how bad this ocean pollution is coming and how it is rapidly getting worse.

-http://discovermagazine.com/2008/jul/10-the-worlds-largest-dump

This website helped me really understand how terrifying this subject really is. There is a huge garbage dump moving around in the middle of the Pacific Ocean and no one is doing anything. Organizations need to be started and plans need to be made. People need to start figuring out a way to fix this problem or else we all could end up dying from over pollution. I used this website in my presentation to help people understand that we really need to fix this issue and we really need to find a solution soon.

http://blog.mywonderfulworld.org/2009/03/the-great-pacific-garbage-patch.html


For the last website I just simply looked to find extra information about the subject matter. I didn't find out anything different, i just found out that this is a very serious matter. We all need to throw in a hand to get this situation under control. We need to find a new way to recycle instead of littering and throwing it all in the ocean. We need to find a new place to put garbage besides burying it inside of the Earth or laying it all in the ocean. I used this website so i could explain in my presentation the subject and what we need to do. I also used these websites of my worst/best-case scenario.

Ocean Polution

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Ocean Pollution (The Great Pacific Garbage Dump)

Q. What, specifically about your topic, are you going to research?

A. On our topic of ocean pollution I will research the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.


Q.
What conclusions did you come to? What do you recommend average citizens do to make a difference?

URL'S

-http://www.greatgarbagepatch.org/
-http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-the-great-pacific-garbage-patch.htm
-http://discovermagazine.com/2008/jul/10-the-worlds-largest-dump
-http://blog.mywonderfulworld.org/2009/03/the-great-pacific-garbage-patch.html

A. The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is a big patch of garbage, approximately the size of Texas, floating in the middle of the ocean. The garbage patch lies between San Francisco and the Hawaiian Islands. The dump is full of biodegradable plastic which is rapidly starting to kill the marine life. Shoes, toys, bags, pacifiers, wrappers, toothbrushes, and much, much more is only part of what is being discovered right now in the dump. Dead animal species are being found with stomachs full of plastic. The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is formed and being formed from ocean currents. This patch is almost like a swirling whirpool of garbage. Marine life is starting to suffer because they are all mistaking garbage with food. Toxins in the water are also causing all sorts of marine life to suffer. In the central North Pacific, plastic outweighs surface zooplankton 6 to 1. Most of the plastic found in the dump is biodegradable. Fish and other forms of marine life then eat these substances which can not degrade in there stomachs which causes them to die. This garbage patch is just about the size of Texas and is rapidly increasing in growth. If we continue to do nothing about this garbage dump, it will contaminate are waters killing marine life and then, eventually, killing us. The only recommendations I can make is to recyle and not litter. You can also join a group to help clean up the waters and find a better place to put garbage other than our Earth's waters.

Q. What would happen if, worst-case scenario, nobody listened to your recommendations?

A. Worst-case scenario is almost every organism on the planet dies from toxis and over-pollution.


Q. What would happen if, best-case scenario, everybody listened to your recommendations?

A. If everyone listened to my recommendations it would be amazing. We all wouldn't die and we would end up with cleaner and safer waters[: