The Water Cycle

A free interactive lesson on the water cycle — evaporation, condensation, precipitation, and collection. Earth's water has been cycling for 4 billion years. Learn how the Sun drives the cycle and why rain is essential for life. Class 4 Science. Includes a quick quiz.

Class 4 ScienceClass 4 / Grade 4Ages 6–9
Lesson
♻️ The Water Cycle
The same water — over and over, forever!☀️evaporation ↑condensationprecipitation ↓ocean / lakeWater has been cycling on Earth for 4 billion years!

Earth has had the same water for over four billion years. The water in your glass may once have been in a dinosaur's body, or a glacial lake from the last ice age. Water is never created or destroyed — it just moves in an endless loop called the water cycle. The Sun's energy drives the whole system, lifting water from the ocean up into the sky and eventually returning it to the land as rain.

What is the water cycle?

The water cycle is the continuous movement of water through Earth's systems. The Sun heats water in oceans and lakes, turning it into vapour (evaporation). The vapour rises, cools, and forms clouds (condensation). Water falls as rain or snow (precipitation) and collects in rivers, lakes, and oceans — then the cycle starts again.

Has the same water always been here?

Yes — water is never created or destroyed; it just changes form and location. The water in your glass may have once been in a dinosaur's body, an ancient ocean, or a glacier from the last Ice Age. Earth has had the same water for over 4 billion years, endlessly cycling through the atmosphere, land, and oceans.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between evaporation and condensation?

Evaporation is liquid water turning into vapour (gas) when heated. Condensation is water vapour cooling and turning back into liquid droplets — forming clouds.

What is precipitation?

Precipitation is any form of water that falls from clouds — rain, snow, sleet, or hail.

What drives the water cycle?

The Sun's energy drives evaporation. Gravity brings precipitation back down. Together they keep the cycle going continuously.

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