Rosen, Rudolph2017-02-212017-02-212016-012016-01http://texasaquaticscience.org/water-ultimate-recyclable-aquatic-science-texas/https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLJ6zBN3Pq7rXv_CIi4oVDk_J3yxwuouDphttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.6/801http://texasaquaticscience.org/water-ultimate-recyclable-aquatic-science-texas/https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLJ6zBN3Pq7rXv_CIi4oVDk_J3yxwuouDpThis chapter includes texts, 1 video clip, and 8 images. The lecture videos are delivered by YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLJ6zBN3Pq7rXv_CIi4oVDk_J3yxwuouDpThe earth’s water is one, finite supply that moves from streams to lakes to oceans, flowing underground, freezing on mountaintops and forming the clouds we see in the sky. All this moving and shifting around of water is one of the largest recycling efforts by mother nature, called the hydrologic cycle and is the driving force behind our weather.en-USaquatic ecosystemsaquatic scienceEwing HalsellHarte Research InstituteMeadows CenterrecyclingRudolph RosenSport Fish Restoration ProgramSTEMwaterChapter 2: Water: The Ultimate RecyclableLearning Object