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nothing is constant in the earth.everything changes every second in the earth.

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13y ago
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12y ago

it will stay the same. because the water amount is bigger than the earth land surface.

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12y ago

becose u all r drinking all d water

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Q: How is the total amount of water on the earth changing?
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Related questions

Is the amount of water on earth always changing of is it a constant amount?

water on the earth remains constant.man :)


Is the amount of water on Earth always changing or it is a constant amount?

water on the earth remains constant.man :)


Is the amount of the water on earth always changing or is it a constant amount?

water on the earth remains constant.man :)


Is the amount of water on earth always changing?

It stays consistent (:


What is the total quantity of salt water in the earth?

the total amount is 98%


What percentage of the total amount of water on Earth is salt water?

97%


The total amount of water on earth is?

The earth is composed of 3/4 water and 1/4 land.


Of the total amount of water on earth what is usable?

Any freshwater on Earth is usable


What the total amount of earth water is?

The Earth has more water than land area. The Earth's estimated total volume of water is 1.386 billion cubic kilometer or 333 million cubic miles.


What is the total amount of water vapor leaving the earth's surface called?

evaporation


Of the total amount of available water on the earth what percent is frozen at the poles?

2%


Does the amount of water on earth change why or why not?

For the most part, the amount of water on Earth stays the same. The only way for the amount of Earth's water to increase would be for it to come from outer space. Not coincidentally, this is precisely what happens. Comets, made of dust and ice, enter the Earth's atmosphere and melt from the friction of the air as it plummets towards Earth's surface. The resulting water is then added to the already existing water in the earth's atmosphere (clouds), in bodies of water (oceans, lakes, etc.), and the water trapped in the form of ice (glaciers, icebergs, etc.)