There is approximately 1,386,000,000 km3 of water on Earth, which includes all the water within the oceans rivers, lakes, groundwater, atmospheric water, and frozen water (i.e. snowcover and the icecaps).
Water volume Lake Erie = 116 cu mi (480 km3) Lake Huron = 849 cu mi (3,540 km3) Lake Michigan = 1,180 cu mi (4,900 km3) Lake Ontario = 393 cu mi (1,640 km3) Lake Superior = 2,900 cu mi (12,000 km3)
163180000000 cubic km (1.63 x 1011 km3). About 15% the volume of Earth.
The total amount of global evaporation is 48800 km3
Mercury's volume = 0.056 x Earths (6.08x1010 km3) Venus' volume = 0.857 x Earths (9.38x1011 km3) (Earth) volume = 1 x Earths (1.08x1012 km3) Mars' volume = 0.151 x Earths (1.63x1011 km3) Jupiter's volume = 1321.3 x Earths (1.43x1015 km3) Saturn's volume = 763.59 x Earths (8.2713x1014 km3) Uranus' volume = 63.086 x Earths (6.833x1013 km3) Neptune's volume = 57.74 x Earths (6.254x1013 km3)
Very little of the water on earth is outside either the oceans or the polar ice caps. Only three percent of the water in the world is fresh, and of that:26.5 million cubic kilometres or about 2.1 percent of all water is in the Antarctic Ice Sheet3 million cubic kilometres or about 0.25 percent is in the Greenland Ice SheetMost of the rest is in a few major lakes like Lake Baikal (23,600 km3 or one fifth of non-frozen water), Lake Tanganyika (18,900 km3), Lake Superior (11,600 km3) and Lake Malawi (7,725 km3).The proportion of the total water that is fresh and not frozen is very small, around 0.003 percent of all the water in the world.
Water volume Lake Erie = 116 cu mi (480 km3) Lake Huron = 849 cu mi (3,540 km3) Lake Michigan = 1,180 cu mi (4,900 km3) Lake Ontario = 393 cu mi (1,640 km3) Lake Superior = 2,900 cu mi (12,000 km3)
Earth is the fifth largest of the 8 planets, and the fifth largest of all objects orbiting the Sun. It is slightly larger than Venus. The planets in order of decreasing size: Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Earth Venus Mars Mercury
Planet Saturn has a volume of 8.2713×10^14 km3
163180000000 cubic km (1.63 x 1011 km3). About 15% the volume of Earth.
The total amount of global evaporation is 48800 km3
10^18 or a quintillion.
4.585 km^3
Loch Ness holds 7.4 km3 (1.8 cu mi) of water.
3,100 cubic miles (mi3) or 12,900 cubic kilometers (km3)
Mercury's volume = 0.056 x Earths (6.08x1010 km3) Venus' volume = 0.857 x Earths (9.38x1011 km3) (Earth) volume = 1 x Earths (1.08x1012 km3) Mars' volume = 0.151 x Earths (1.63x1011 km3) Jupiter's volume = 1321.3 x Earths (1.43x1015 km3) Saturn's volume = 763.59 x Earths (8.2713x1014 km3) Uranus' volume = 63.086 x Earths (6.833x1013 km3) Neptune's volume = 57.74 x Earths (6.254x1013 km3)
1 yd3 = 7.64555 * 10-10 km3
Very little of the water on earth is outside either the oceans or the polar ice caps. Only three percent of the water in the world is fresh, and of that:26.5 million cubic kilometres or about 2.1 percent of all water is in the Antarctic Ice Sheet3 million cubic kilometres or about 0.25 percent is in the Greenland Ice SheetMost of the rest is in a few major lakes like Lake Baikal (23,600 km3 or one fifth of non-frozen water), Lake Tanganyika (18,900 km3), Lake Superior (11,600 km3) and Lake Malawi (7,725 km3).The proportion of the total water that is fresh and not frozen is very small, around 0.003 percent of all the water in the world.