Natural phenomenon
As a natural phenomenon or natural event which people are appearing , so sensuously tangible , d. H. indicates conspicuous or measurable natural events that are due to natural causes. In its denotative meaning, the term is used less in a cultural context .
In contrast, there are anthropogenically triggered phenomena that can be traced back directly or indirectly to human activities.
Important groups of natural phenomena are:
- Celestial phenomena of all kinds such as objects and movements in the starry sky , its changes such as novae or changeable , surprising phenomena such as comets or falling stars - see also Astronomical Phenomenology
- meteorological and hydrological phenomena such as climate - and weather phenomena, thunderstorms , strong winds (storms), heavy rain , snow , hail , lightning and thunder , objects of observation as air pressure and - temperature , including phenomena of atmospheric optics, such as rainbow , halo , glowing Night clouds , dusk , evening and dawn , midnight sun , polar lights
- geological and other geoscientific processes such as tectonics , earthquakes , volcanism , crevice and mountain formation , erosion and its diverse manifestations, karst , runoff phenomena , avalanches , landslides , landslides, etc.
- biological observations such as migration and distribution of populations , reproduction or extinction , phenomena of ecology and reactions of the environment , etc.
- microbiological phenomena such as soil fauna , changes in the occurrence of bacteria and microbes , water ecology , etc. v. m.
- Energy and atomic physics : phenomena resulting from celestial and solar radiation , formation of deposits , decay of radioactive nuclides
See also
Individual evidence
Sources: Brockhaus , Kertz: Geophysik