VIEW: What is the Carbon Cycle? (BrainPop)

The carbon cycle is the movement of carbon from solid to liquid to gas, and from rocks to water to air to organisms.
Carbon dioxide gas, CO2, makes up approximately 0.04% of the Earth's atmosphere. Plants take it up during photosynthesis to form sugars (chemical symbol C6H12O6). During this process, plants give off oxygen as a byproduct. Animals consume these organic carbon molecules by eating plants and one another, and break them back down during digestion, returning some of the CO2 to the air and using the rest to build tissues.
Organic matter that isn't consumed - feces, shells, wood, leaves, and flesh - accumulates layer upon layer on the seabed, at the bottom of swamps, and along the forest floor. Eventually it hardens into rock or liquefies into petroleum. When the rocks weather or the fuel is burned, the carbon is transferred back into the water, soil, and the atmosphere.
Atmospheric CO2 can be absorbed by seawater as well. Cold water can hold the most, so the icy waters at the poles take up carbon dioxide and transfer it to the depths. When cold ocean currents rise up to the surface in tropical areas, the warm water releases CO2 back to the sky.
Both human and natural processes emit carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. When humans burn fossil fuels (coal, oil, and natural gas), they release carbon into the atmosphere. Volcanic eruptions, cellular respiration from organisms, decomposition, and ocean water evaporation are all examples of natural processes that add carbon to the atmosphere.
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