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Contents contributed and discussions participated by marino5856

marino5856

Why is the ocean salty, but rivers flowing into it are not? - 1 views

  • In the beginning, the primeval seas were probably only slightly salty. But over time, as rain fell to the Earth and ran over the land, breaking up rocks and transporting their minerals to the ocean, the ocean has become saltier.
  • Rain replenishes freshwater in rivers and streams, so they don’t taste salty. However, the water in the ocean collects all of the salt and minerals from all of the rivers that flow into i
  • It is estimated that the rivers and streams flowing from the United States alone discharge 225 million tons of dissolved solids and 513 million tons of suspended sediment annually to the ocean. Throughout the world, rivers carry an estimated four billion tons of dissolved salts to the ocean annually.
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  • About the same tonnage of salt from ocean water probably is deposited as sediment on the ocean bottom and thus, yearly gains may offset yearly losses. In other words, the ocean today probably has a balanced salt input and output (and so the ocean is no longer getting saltier).
    • marino5856
       
      the sea is salty because it brings the earth materials and it becomes salty. The rivers are not salty because when it rains it takes away everything and the earth matirals don't go to the rivers.
marino5856

Why Do We Change the Clocks Twice a Year? | Wonderopolis - 0 views

  • it’s Daylight Saving Time! Daylight Saving Time (or “Summer Time,” as it’s known in many parts of the world) was created to make better use of the long sunlight hours of the summer. By “springing” clocks forward an hour in March, we move an hour of daylight from the morning to the evening. On the first Sunday in November, we “fall back” and rewind our clocks to return to Standard Time.
    • marino5856
       
      the hour changes to save daylight and light because like we have the sun light we don't need to waste la light. It changes in summer to have more light when it is getting night and in october again so that it is more dark because in winter we don't need so much the light.
marino5856

What does AM and PM stand for? - 0 views

  • So you ask yourself, what does AM and PM stand for? What are the acronyms for AM and PM? What do the initials a.m. and p.m. mean? Both AM and PM come from Latin. AM stands for Ante Meridiem and PM stands for Post Meridiem. Furthermore, Ante Meridiem means before midday (before Noon), and Post Meridiem means after midday (after noon).
    • marino5856
       
      PM and AM  is a latin name. PM stand for post meridiem (after noon) and AM stands for ante meridiem (Before noon) 
    • marino5856
       
      But it is easier to remember by AM stands for after midnight and PM pre-midnight or prior to midnight
  • Although not the correct acronym, for easy remembering, you could say that AM stands for After Midnight and PM stands for Pre-Midnight or prior to midnight.
marino5856

World Clock: Time in the 24 World Time Zones - 0 views

    • marino5856
       
      There are actually 23hr and 59 minutes so they say it is 24 hours. The p.m starts again in one but this is how we count them: 13=1 pm, 14=2 pm 15= 3pm 16= 4 pm 17= 5 pm 18= 6 pm 19= 7 pm 20 =8 pm 21 = 9 pm 22= 10 pm 23 =11 pm. Pm is 23:59:59. AFter this its starts all over again.
  • At Noon, the 12-Hour clock repeats the same hour numbers but as PMAt Noon, the 24-Hour clock keeps adding hour numbers: 13 = 1 PM; 14 = 2 PM; 15 = 3 PM; 16 = 4 PM; 17 = 5 PM; 18 = 6 PM; 19 = 7 PM; 20 = 8 PM; 21 = 9 PM; 22 = 10 PM; 23 = 11 PM through 23:59:59 -- then starts over at 00:00:00 (Midnight)On both clocks, the minutes and seconds are exactly the same
marino5856

Why We Divide the Day Into Seconds, Minutes, and Hours - 0 views

  • The concept of needing to divide up the day seems second nature to even the smallest kid who asks, “is it snack time”.   The reality is, even though we’ve decided that there is a need to divide up time, the actual process and the way we go about it has been changing for millennia.  The cruel irony is that even though we know we need to measure time, there has never been a consensus on what time really is.
    • marino5856
       
      The day is divided into minutes, seconds, and hours because of snack time so it all depended in how many times would we eat. That is equal to 12 hours plus the night so another 12 hours. Thats why there are 24 hours in a day.
marino5856

Ever wonder why a day has 24 hours and a minute has 60 seconds - OMG Facts - The World'... - 0 views

  • Egyptians (who used base 12) developed a sundial which looked like a T-shaped bar placed in the ground with would divide the time between sunrise and sunset into 12 parts. Because of the seasonal change in the length of time between sunrise and sunset, summer hours were longer than winter hours! Historians theorize that the importance of 12 is based on the number of finger joints on each hand (not counting the thumb) or the number of lunar cycles in a year. The division of the night into 12 parts was achieved by Egyptian astronomers who observed the appearance of 12 key stars in the night sky. Out of these divisions was born the concept of a 24-hour day. However, seasonal hour length was used for many centuries, and fixed hours became common only after the appearance of mechanical clocks in 14th century Europe!
    • marino5856
       
      The egyptians  divided the night into 12 hours. So know the people are used t have 24 hours in a day. Many people think it was born like that but it wasn't the egyptians divided the night into 12 hours and also the day into 12 hours. That is 24 hours in total of the day.
marino5856

Earth's Rotation - 0 views

  • The earth rotates about an imaginary line that passes through the North and South Poles of the planet.  This line is called the axis of rotation.  Earth rotates about this axis once each day (approximately 24 hours).  Although you most likely already knew that fact, there is a slight complication most people are not aware of.
  • More specifically, our rotation period (the time elapsed for one rotation) with respect to the stars  is called a sidereal day.  A sidereal day is 24 sidereal hours, or 23 hours and 56 minutes on a normal clock.  Our clock time is based on the earth's rotation with respect to the sun from solar noon to solar noon.  This is a solar day, and it is divided into 24 hours.  Because Earth travels about 1 / 365 of the way around the sun during one day, there is a small difference between solar time and sidereal time.
    • marino5856
       
      The earth rotates with axis lines and  there is 24 lines thats why there are 24 hours in a day. The earth time is rotated into 24hours because the earth rotate 1/365 during one day.
marino5856

Why is a minute divided into 60 seconds, an hour into 60 minutes, yet there are only 24... - 0 views

  • Thanks to documented evidence of the Egyptians' use of sundials, most historians credit them with being the first civilization to divide the day into smaller parts. The first sundials were simply stakes placed in the ground that indicated time by the length and direction of the resulting shadow. As early as 1500 B.C., the Egyptians had developed a more advanced sundial.
    • marino5856
       
      Thanks to the duodecimal system. The  egyptians used the system to make counting more easier. Also the number 12 is typically attributed.
  • A T-shaped bar placed in the ground, this instrument was calibrated to divide the interval between sunrise and sunset into 12 parts. This division reflected Egypt's use of the duodecimal system--the importance of the number 12 is typically attributed either to the fact that it equals the number of lunar cycles in a year or the number of finger joints on each hand (three in each of the four fingers, excluding the thumb), making it possible to count to 12 with the thumb.
  • The next-generation sundial likely formed the first representation of what we now call the hour. Although the hours within a given day were approximately equal, their lengths varied during the year, with summer hours being much longer than winter hours
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  • Egyptian astronomers also first observed a set of 36 stars that divided the circle of the heavens into equal parts. The passage of night could be marked by the appearance of 18 of these stars, three of which were assigned to each of the two twilight periods when the stars were difficult to view. The period of total darkness was marked by the remaining 12 stars, again resulting in 12 divisions of night (another nod to the duodecimal system).
    • marino5856
       
      Egyptians noticed that there was 36 stars in each part so they divided that into equal parts 12.
marino5856

Curious About Astronomy: Why is a day divided into 24 hours? - 0 views

  • December 2003 answer: It appears that the Egyptians were responsible for the 24 hour day. The Eqyptians were fond of counting in base twelve (instead of base 10 which is commonly used today). This is thought to be because they counted finger joints instead of fingers. Each of your fingers has three joints, so if you count by pointing to finger joints with your thumb you can count to twelve on each hand. This might seem arbitrary, but is actually just a strange as counting in base ten simply because we have ten digits.
    • marino5856
       
      The egyptians were the ones that were in charge of the 24 hours in a day because they had a system so they found  a counting base in twelve.
  • The Egyptians divided the clock into 12 hours of daytime and 12 hours of night-time (or alternatively 10 hours between sunrise and sunset, an hour for each twilight period and 12 hours of darkness). This is known because of various sundials from the period which have been found to be marked with hours. Interestingly this means that hours started out changing in length with the seasons (as the amount of daylight vs. darkness changes).
    • marino5856
       
      they divided the clock in 12 hours because 12 in the night and about 10 in the sunrise that it became 12hours so that it is equal.
    • marino5856
       
      The egyptians divided the clock into 12 hours. 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12 a.m and 1.2.3.4.5.6.7.8.9.10.11.12 p.m so that all the p.m could see the stars and the a.m the sunrise. Like there are 12 a.m and 12 p.m so 12 plus 12 equals24 thats why we have 24 hours in a day.
marino5856

BrainPOP | Time Zones - 0 views

    • marino5856
       
      The earth is divided in 24 time zones. Time zones go north south pole  to north pole, they are meridians, They are 360 that are degrees. Thats why they are different times. They are the same minute but different hour to the west of it  and highest hour to the east. Smaller goes to west  and bigger to east. The earth rotates. Thats why the hour changes. Like the sun is up it has a different hour than when the moon is up. The earth soins 15 degrees per hour. The sun rises in L.A. at the same minute than N.Y. when it is getting dark.
marino5856

hour (unit of time) -- Encyclopedia Britannica - 0 views

  • in timekeeping
  • 3,600 seconds, now defined in terms of radiation emitted from atoms of the element cesium under specified conditions. The hour was formerly defined as the 24th part of a mean solar day—i.e., of the average period of rotation of the Earth relative to the Sun. The hour of sidereal time, 1/24 of the Earth’s rotation period relative to the stars, was about 10 seconds shorter than the hour of mean solar time.
    • marino5856
       
      It also has 24 hours the earth because in the system of the egyptians it said that it also has 24 hours because of the earth spinning.
  • In even earlier systems of timekeeping, an hour was 1/12 of a period of daylight or darkness—hence, variable in length with seasonal changes in the length of day and night. The custom of dividing the cycle of day and night into 24 periods seems to have originated with the ancient Egyptians.
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