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There are numerous channels for moving water from one place to another: aqueducts, canals, pipes, hoses, rivers - to name a few. To carry water from one place to another, you would need a vessel, not a channel. Vessels come in numerous shapes and sizes depending on the amount you can carry. One gallon of water weighs about 8 lbs. Buckets, cups, and pitchers are suggested for smaller amounts. Drums, tanks, tanker trucks and rolling vats would serve those looking to move a large quantity.
AS WE ALL KNOW THAT water cant stay still for like a minute because the air constantly blow the water and the water move from place to place's harder the air blow the more water moves from another phase.
Salt
They are a different shape and have a dark premiter!
It is known as desalination. The simplest method is thermal: boil the saline water, capture the steam and condense it back into water, leaving the salt behind. Another method is electrical: pass an electric current through the saline water. The current drives ions across a selectively permeable membrane, carrying the dissociated salt ions with it. Another method is reverse osmosis using pressure: Pressure is used to drive water through a membrane, leaving the salt behind.
Aquaduct
Canal or aquaduct or flume.
A river A ditch An aqueduct A gutter A pipe
There are numerous channels for moving water from one place to another: aqueducts, canals, pipes, hoses, rivers - to name a few. To carry water from one place to another, you would need a vessel, not a channel. Vessels come in numerous shapes and sizes depending on the amount you can carry. One gallon of water weighs about 8 lbs. Buckets, cups, and pitchers are suggested for smaller amounts. Drums, tanks, tanker trucks and rolling vats would serve those looking to move a large quantity.
a rock can move from one place to another by water. the rocks flow with the water into a river which leads into the sea and the sea cold lead to anywere.
The word with that pronunciation is aqueduct (water channel, or a bridge carrying water).
the volume of water in a river channel
There are numerous channels for moving water from one place to another: aqueducts, canals, pipes, hoses, rivers - to name a few. To carry water from one place to another, you would need a vessel, not a channel. Vessels come in numerous shapes and sizes depending on the amount you can carry. One gallon of water weighs about 8 lbs. Buckets, cups, and pitchers are suggested for smaller amounts. Drums, tanks, tanker trucks and rolling vats would serve those looking to move a large quantity.
Portage is the act of carrying the cargo and the boat from one place, such as the bottom of rapids, to another place, such as the top of rapids. A Haul over is a smooth place on an isthmus where a boat is dragged across land between bodies of water.
The thermohaline current, the Gulf Stream, the English channel, a river or stream.
an aqueduct
sewer