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4.3 Agriscience Vocabulary A

Don't forget B!
Across
The artificial application of water to soil for the purpose of increasing plant production.
The most valuable natural resource and the most limiting factor in crop production.
Changing from a solid to a liquid.
The process of turning a vapor into a liquid.
The seepage of water into soil or rock.
The gaseous envelope surrounding the earth.
Features of a landform such as a hill, valley, slope, canyon, and alluvial fan.
The amount of water or other moisture received from clouds.
A stream of water bearing the waste of land from higher to lower ground.
TDS; measurement of the combined content of all inorganic and organic substances contained in a liquid in molecular or ionized suspended form.
Features taken together to make up the surface of the earth, including broad and minor features.
Features of a landform such as a plain, plateau, and mountain.
Pollution diffused in the origin and in time and points of discharge; heavily dependent on weather conditions such as rain and snow; can originate naturally or from humans.
Water within the earth that supplies wells and springs.
An undesirable substance unintentionally present.
Clearness of appearance
Changing from a liquid to a solid.
Down
Any standing body of inland water.
The total stream discharge of water, including both surface and subsurface flow.
Water passing through a plant from the roots through the vascular system to the atmosphere.
The amount of dissolved oxygen present in water.
Generating electricity by conversion of the energy of running water.
The pointed top of a mountain or ridge.
Pollution that occurs from a single source.
Any broad, narrow, crested, or elongated land feature rising above or separating lowlands, plains, or valley basins.
A dense, compacted layer of soil under the surface that may interfere with the downward penetration of both roots and water.
Water on the surface, as lakes and rivers, in contrast to that underground.
The point where two streams meet.
Living in water.
Flowing water.