Yes, it is possible.
Water from oceans, lakes, rivers, and streams evaporate as part of the water cycle.
Water is mostly evaporated from oceans, seas, lakes, rivers, etc.
if its hot it will slightly but it wont affect the lakes overall volume
the large bodies of water evaporate and then it condenses and then perciptates
Because occur the reverse processes: condensation and precipitation.
precipitation
When seas or lakes evaporate, evaporites form which are sedimentary rocks that consist of minerals deposited from evaporating water. Common evaporite minerals include halite (rock salt), gypsum, and calcite.
Lakes and oceans would be effected because if the boiling point changed, the water could evaporate...not sure about the atmosphere. Sorry!
Water is evaporated from the external layer of water.
The time it takes for water to evaporate in the sun depends on factors like temperature, humidity, and surface area exposed. In general, a small amount of water can evaporate in a few hours under direct sunlight, while larger bodies of water like lakes or oceans may take days or even weeks to completely evaporate.
No it doesn't. There is no place on Earth that exceeds the temp of 100C. If water had to be boiled to evaporate, then wet laundry would never get dry, puddles would never dry up just as a few examples :)
When seas or lakes evaporate, evaporite sedimentary rocks can form. These rocks are created through the precipitation of minerals as water evaporates, leaving behind salts and other minerals. Common examples of evaporite rocks include gypsum and halite, which are formed from the evaporation of seawater or saline lake water.