Water Cycle | Definition, Steps, Diagram, & Facts | Britannica
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- Introduction & Top Questions
- Major hydrologic processes
- Residence times in various reservoirs
- Effects of human activities
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Water and its Varying Forms
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- How do humans impact the water cycle?
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External Websites- European Commission - The water cycle connects us all
- Cell Press - One Earth - Anthropogenic influences on the water cycle amplify uncertainty in drought assessments
- Northwest River Forecast Center - The Water Cycle
- National Center for Biotechnology Information - PubMed Central - The energy and water cycles under climate change
- Khan Academy - The water cycle
- Thompson River University - Environmental Geology - The Hydrologic Cycle
- USGS Water Science School - Evaporation and the Water Cycle
- Pennsylvania State University - Department of Energy and Mineral Engineering - Understanding water cycle
- UCAR Center for Science Education - The Water Cycle
- NASA - Global Precipitation Measurement - The Water Cycle
- U.S. Geological Survey - The Water Cycle
- IOPscience - The global atmospheric water cycle (PDF)
- Chemistry Libretexts - Water Cycle
- water cycle - Children's Encyclopedia (Ages 8-11)
- water cycle - Student Encyclopedia (Ages 11 and up)
What is the water cycle?
The water cycle, also known as the hydrologic cycle, involves the continuous circulation of water in the Earth-atmosphere system, including processes like evaporation, transpiration, condensation, precipitation, and runoff.
How long does the water cycle take?
One molecule of water takes more than 3,000 years to complete the water cycle. The various reservoirs in the water cycle have different water residence times. Water in the oceans remains for 3,000 to 3,230 years, in the atmosphere for about 10 days before falling as rain or snow, and in the other reservoirs (lakes, rivers, ice, and groundwater) for variable amounts of times between these two extremes.
How do humans impact the water cycle?
Human beings affect the water cycle in various ways through their activities. The diminish water quality largely through the release of chemical pollutants, and their reliance on fossil-fuel combustion drives the process of global warming, which alters precipitation patterns and melts mountain glaciers and reduces the ice volume at the poles.
water cycle, cycle that involves the continuous circulation of water in the Earth-atmosphere system. Of the many processes involved in the water cycle, the most important are evaporation, transpiration, condensation, precipitation, and runoff. Although the total amount of water within the cycle remains essentially constant, its distribution among the various processes is continually changing.
A brief treatment of the water cycle follows. For full treatment, see hydrosphere: The water cycle.
Major hydrologic processes

Evaporation, one of the major processes in the cycle, is the transfer of water from the surface of the Earth to the atmosphere. By evaporation, water in the liquid state is transferred to the gaseous, or vapor, state. This transfer occurs when some molecules in a water mass have attained sufficient kinetic energy to eject themselves from the water surface. The main factors affecting evaporation are temperature, humidity, wind speed, and solar radiation. The direct measurement of evaporation, though desirable, is difficult and possible only at point locations. The principal source of water vapor is the oceans, but evaporation also occurs in soils, snow, and ice. Evaporation from snow and ice, the direct conversion from solid to vapor, is known as sublimation. Transpiration is the evaporation of water through minute pores, or stomata, in the leaves of plants. For practical purposes, transpiration and the evaporation from all water, soils, snow, ice, vegetation, and other surfaces are lumped together and called evapotranspiration, or total evaporation.
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Water vapor is the primary form of atmospheric moisture. Although its storage in the atmosphere is comparatively small, water vapor is extremely important in forming the moisture supply for dew, frost, fog, clouds, and precipitation. Practically all water vapour in the atmosphere is confined to the troposphere (the region below 6 to 8 miles [10 to 13 km] altitude).

The transition process from the vapor state to the liquid state is called condensation. Condensation may take place as soon as the air contains more water vapour than it can receive from a free water surface through evaporation at the prevailing temperature. This condition occurs as the consequence of either cooling or the mixing of air masses of different temperatures. By condensation, water vapor in the atmosphere is released to form precipitation.

Precipitation that falls to the Earth is distributed in four main ways: some is returned to the atmosphere by evaporation, some may be intercepted by vegetation and then evaporated from the surface of leaves, some percolates into the soil by infiltration, and the remainder flows directly as surface runoff into the sea. Some of the infiltrated precipitation may later percolate into streams as groundwater runoff. Direct measurement of runoff is made by stream gauges and plotted against time on hydrographs.
Most groundwater is derived from precipitation that has percolated through the soil. Groundwater flow rates, compared with those of surface water, are very slow and variable, ranging from a few millimeters to a few meters a day. Groundwater movement is studied by tracer techniques and remote sensing.
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Ice also plays a role in the water cycle. Ice and snow on the Earth’s surface occur in various forms such as frost, sea ice, and glacier ice. When soil moisture freezes, ice also occurs beneath the Earth’s surface, forming permafrost in tundra climates. About 18,000 years ago glaciers and ice caps covered approximately one-third of the Earth’s land surface. Today about 12 percent of the land surface remains covered by ice masses.
Residence times in various reservoirs
The various reservoirs in the water cycle have different water residence times—that is, the amount of water in a reservoir divided by either the rate of addition of water to the reservoir or the rate of loss from it. The oceans have a water residence time of 3,000 to 3,230 years, which reflects the large amount of water in the oceans. Water evaporates from the land and ocean surface. In the atmosphere the residence time of water vapour relative to total evaporation is only about 10 days before falling as rain or snow. Lakes, rivers, ice, and groundwaters have residence times lying between these two extremes and are highly variable.
Also called: hydrologic cycle (Show more) Key People: Pierre Perrault (Show more) Related Topics: precipitation interception cloud formation sublimation nucleus infiltration (Show more) On the Web: USGS Water Science School - Evaporation and the Water Cycle (Dec. 26, 2025) (Show more) See all related contentEffects of human activities

The water cycle is also affected by human activities. Water quality in many parts of the world is largely diminished by the release of chemical compounds (including industrial waste, sewage, fertilizers and pesticides, and petroleum) and heat (see also water pollution and plastic pollution). The water cycle’s operation is also affected by changes to the climate brought on by global warming, including changing rainfall and snowfall patterns, altering wind and ocean circulation, melting ice in mountain glaciers, and reducing the ice volume of Earth’s polar ice caps (see global warming: patterns of warming).
The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by John P. Rafferty.Tag » What Is Transpiration Water Cycle
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