I went down to the river and saw the ground water under the surface water
it affeact them by slowing them down and makes them less strong
A stream is water runing along the ground through a trench in a down hill direction. A spring is water coming from under the ground to the surface.
a stream is water running along thee ground through a trench in a down hill direction. a spring is water coming under the ground to the surface.
Infiltration
Water down under is ground water.
the term for under water is ''ground water ''.
Ground water. ;)
I went down to the river and saw the ground water under the surface water
When they say the airport is "located below sea level" (as is about 1/3 of the Netherlands) it means the land is dry, but the ground is actually lower down than sea level. Fortunately, it is seperated from the sea by higher ground.
it affeact them by slowing them down and makes them less strong
because the level of the water was increasing and it broke down
Either to cool down the road surface - or to keep dust down at ground level.
A stream is water runing along the ground through a trench in a down hill direction. A spring is water coming from under the ground to the surface.
No there tends to be a lot more fresh water in lakes and rivers than under ground because it won't be as fresh when it's down there but a more likely chance if it being in lakes and rivers
a stream is water running along thee ground through a trench in a down hill direction. a spring is water coming under the ground to the surface.
Since water "seeks its own level", The water you see with the plug open could be the level of the ground water and the very reason the plug has been removed. Without the plug removed it is possible to have an empty pool "pop" out of the ground as a result of the pressure. Example: Imagine trying to push a Tupperware bowl into a sink full of water. Let go and it "pops" up. Now think of the bowl with a hole in the bottom. As you push down, the water comes into the bowl and seeks the level of the water in the sink. No pressure!