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One way is that carbon dioxide automatically dissolves in cold ocean surface waters anyway so large bodies of water already have a concentration of carbon dioxide. Another way is when carbon dioxide dissolves in rainwater which later reacts with minerals in rocks. These rocks then get carried away by rivers or streams into bigger bodies of water and the carbon is transported through the minerals in the rocks.
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Davinia.
Two ways in which carbon can get from the atmosphere to the hydrosphere are the melting of glaciers containing carbon and the exchange of C02 between the ocean and the atmosphere.
Carbon is commonly found on earth in many forms. The most common of which is in the form of a gas known as Carbon Dioxide (C02). The atmosphere contains carbon dioxide as a result of animal respiration and from human activity that produces Carbon dioxide as a byproduct.
The two ways this carbon can make its way into the hydrosphere are:
- Melting of Glaciers that store carbon
- Exchange of gases at the ocean's surface.
Some glaciers store carbon as a result of fuel combustion byproducts. This ice then melts into the ocean adding its carbon to the hydrosphere. Also, as a result of pressure differences, interchanges of gases including carbon dioxide commonly take place between the ocean and the atmosphere.
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