nope
NO
land
Once water passes through the zone of saturation, it continues to move downwards under the force of gravity, through the unsaturated zone, until it reaches the water table again. The movement may be influenced by the geology and permeability of the materials it encounters.
Fossils found in rock at the top of mountains indicate that the rock was once at the bottom of a body of water because the fossils are typically of marine organisms that lived in water. The presence of marine fossils in mountain rock suggests that the rock was uplifted from below sea level to its current position at the mountain top over millions of years.
Anyone can once you get used to it.
Submarine mountains that were once active volcanoes are called seamounts.
Mountains are formed through geological processes such as tectonic plate movement and volcanic activity, not from trees. The idea that mountains were once trees is a misconception.
Basically, the rock the mountain is made out of was harder than the rock that once surrounded it, so the water eroded the soft rock away, leaving the mountain. Alternitavely, there could have been a large amount of debris depositied there by the river, or it could have even been man-made. Hope I helped :)
no
by rocks.
No, but it surfaces every once in a while to get air.
you look on you tube under intently frozen water you cant make hot water once you touch it because eat the moment it gets colder then it wont be hot water it will be cold water