A dam can affect a river by building up water on one side and letting small amounts of water come out from the other side. this cause's algae and mud to build up on one side of the dam it also damages the other side of the river by causing it to have less flow in creating lots of algae
For more info go to www.miniclip.com/thewatercycle.
No because a dam is a barrier across the river and it controls the flow of the water
Source of energy is the sun.
Chemical change does not occur in water cycle. There is no change in chemical structure.
in lakes rivers sea and all they will evaprate and go and change into water vapour and come down as rain from the clouds and how you pedel in the cycle it will be going on like how you pedel in the cycle this is called water cycle
The change in temperature causes global warming. It affects water cycle.
There could be change in the content of water. It will affect the level of water in the water bodies.
Source of energy is the sun.
dams cause many fishs' life cycle
Chemical change does not occur in water cycle. There is no change in chemical structure.
The water cycle is also known as the hydrological cycle or H20 cycle describes
The water cycle is also known as the hydrological cycle or H20 cycle describes
Dams that force the water to change direction are what control the flow of the Nile river. These dams can bring water to areas affected by drought and are prized by the Egyptian people.
the water cycle
Flora and fauna are affected by water cycle. It causes weather change.
Water cycle is a continuous process. It occurs every time.
there is absolutely no way to change the water cycle but there is a way to stop it get rid of all free and unshaded water the only way to stop it
Because solar energy runs the water cycle, giving rise to precipitation, and then the rain water flows into the reservoirs of dams.
Because it just is recycled. The water cycle moves water out of oceans and rivers into the atmosphere. It falls as precipitation and runs into rivers and dams. We drink it and wash in it and flush it back into the rivers where the sun soaks it up into the atmosphere again. A cycle!