- La Niña
- A natural climate variation in which the trade winds are stronger than normal and surface water off of South America is cold.
- lahar
- A volcanic mudflow containing ash, rock, and water from melting snow or rainfall that races down river valleys during an eruption.
- lake
- A large body of freshwater drained by a stream; naturally occurring or human-made.
- lake-effect snow
- Extreme snowfall caused by the evaporation of relatively warm, moist air into a cold front that then drops its snow on the leeward side of the lake.
- land breeze
- A wind that blows from land to sea in winter when the ocean is warmer than the land.
- landform
- A physical feature that is part of the landscape, such as a hill or peninsula.
- landslide
- Rapid movement downslope of rock and debris under the influence of gravity.
- latent heat
- Energy absorbed or released as material changes from solid to liquid or liquid to gas.
- lateral continuity
- A sedimentary rock layer that extends sideways as wide as the basin in which it forms.
- lateral moraine
- Glacial till formed from debris that falls at the edges of a glacier.
- laterite
- Nutrient poor, red, tropical soil that forms in rainforest areas.
- latitude
- The location of a place between the north and south pole relative to the equator.
- lava
- Molten rock that has reached the Earth’s surface.
- lava dome
- A dome-shaped plug of viscous lava that cools near the vent of a volcano.
- lava plateau
- A flat area formed by the eruption of large amounts of fluid lava.
- law of conservation of energy
- Law stating that energy cannot be created or destroyed.
- leaching
- The process of removing dissolved minerals as they are carried to lower layers in soil.
- leaf litter
- Dead leaves, branches, bark, and other plant parts that accumulate on the floor of a forest.
- levee
- A raised structure designed to hold back the waters of a stream or river in the case of a flood.
- light-year
- The distance light can travel in one year; 9.5 trillion kilometers.
- lightning
- A huge discharge of electricity typical of thunderstorms.
- limiting factor
- The one factor that limits the population of a region. The limiting factor can be a nutrient, water, space, or any other biotic or abiotic factor that the species need.
- limnology
- The study of freshwater bodies and the organisms that live in them.
- liquefacation
- Clay, silt, and sand saturated with water become like quicksand, lose their strength, and behave more like a liquid than a solid.
- lithification
- The creation of rock from sediments.
- lithosphere
- The layer of solid, brittle rock that makes up the Earth’s surface; the crust and the uppermost mantle.
- loam
- Soil texture that forms from a roughly equal combination of sand, silt and clay.
- location
- Where an object is on Earth, best described in three dimensions.
- loess
- Extremely fine-grained, wind-borne deposit of silts and clays; forms nearly vertical cliffs.
- longitude
- The location of a place relative to the Prime Meridian, which runs north-south through Greenwich, England.
- longshore current
- Local surface currents that move along a shoreline in the direction of prevailing winds.
- low Earth orbit
- Satellites that orbit relatively close to Earth.
- low pressure zone
- A region where relatively warm, lower density air is rising.
- low tide
- The lowest water levels during a day when high tide is one-quarter of the way around Earth’s sphere.
- LUCA (Last Universal Common Ancestor)
- The last life form that was the ancestor to all life that came afterward
- lunar
- Related to the Moon.
- lunar eclipse
- An eclipse that occurs when the Moon moves through the shadow of the Earth and is blocked from view.
- luster
- The way light reflects off of the surface of the mineral.
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- Earth Science for High School. Provided by: CK-12. Located at: http://www.ck12.org/book/CK-12-Earth-Science-For-High-School/. License: CC BY-NC: Attribution-NonCommercial