Carbon Cycle
The carbon cycle is the biogeochemical process by which carbon atoms cycle between the atmosphere (as carbon dioxide), the biosphere (in living organisms), the lithosphere (in rocks and fossil fuels), and the hydrosphere (in oceans). It operates through both fast biological cycles (years to decades) and slow geological cycles (millions of years).
Real World
The Amazon rainforest absorbs roughly 2 billion tonnes of CO2 per year through photosynthesis, acting as a critical biological pump in the fast carbon cycle, while the White Cliffs of Dover represent millions of years of geological carbon storage as marine organisms were compressed into chalk.
Exam Focus
Distinguish fast (biological) from slow (geological) cycles with timescales; examiners reward precise terminology like 'flux' and 'reservoir'.
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