User talk:Issy99

Hello everyone,

I am new to Wikipedia! I love reading Wikipedia's articles and I think that they are very detailed and descriptive. I would love to help write some articles that I know greatly about:

Anything to do with Harry Potter I know about hugely. Facts about Math and Science I will help with. Anything to do with dogs I am pleasured to write about.

I am looking forward to help Wikipedia in the best way I can. Thankyou!

Please reply to as many of my messages as possible, thankyou.

www.http://en.wikipedia.org

If there is anything about Harry Potter that you don't know about ask me.

--Issy99 (talk) 21:41, 24 March 2011 (UTC)

I thought that I might add in a little portion of my own research on Oceans and Shorlines, just to show that I want to help wikipedia, and to show that this is good info:

The combination of all the water on, in, and above the Earth is called the hydrosphere. By far the largest components of the hydrosphere are the oceans that separate the Earth’s continental land masses. The oceans contain over 97% of the Earth's water, and cover 70% of the Earth's surface. All of the water that passes through lakes, rivers and streams eventually makes its way to the oceans.

Earth's oceans support an amazing diversity of life, provide us with food, recreation, and transportation, and they play a role in driving the Earth's climate. They are one of our most valuable natural resources.

Oceanographers are scientists who study all aspects of the oceans: the organisms that live there, the contours and formations of the ocean floor, the waters and their movements (currents and waves), and the forces and processes that make oceans what they are. They also explore high mountains and deep valleys that exist hidden to us on land by the depths of ocean waters.