yes
The collection of groundwater is a fundamental part of the water cycle. The water falls from the sky in the form of rain or snow and runs through the water systems to gather on the earth's surface. As time passes, the water that is not evaporated into the atmosphere to start the cycle over seeps into the ground through cracks in the earth's crust, replenishing the groundwater.
Wetlands form in places where water is trapped in low areas or where ground water seeps onto the surfaces of land
It rains then that water forms a lake or river then the water soaks down into the ground Then it must stay there for a couple of years then it forms a large amount of clean water This cycle forms groundwater.
Sewage - Apex
They form when water seeps through cracks in the cavern
There is no definite weather pattern for wetlands as they relate more to terrain than to weather patterns. They form most often in fairly mist climates but can also occur in drier areas where an aquifer reaches the surface.
the aquatic is wetlands
Fossils form through the process of mineral replacement beginning when an organism dies and is buried. Groundwater seeps around the organism, and the minerals in the water gradually replace the minerals in the hard parts of the organism. Over time these minerals turn into a stone replica of an organism.
Mudpots form when depressions or enclosed basins containing gas seeps, as they bubble water or viscous mud.
Limestone
Rivers, lakes and wetlands form because the rain falling on the land must flow downhill, towards the sea, and hills and valleys channel the water. If on level land there is no easy outlet, then the water will stand, so forming the wetlands.
Freezing, Amber, Tar seeps, Casts and molds Petrification