Less than 0.3%
Less than 0.3%Gurjot Singh Sodhi
It provided them with clean drinking water.
There are a lot of water are found in rivers.
3% is fresh, but 1% is for drinking.
I think the answer is fairly obvious - water. Water was essential for drinking, cooking, cleaning, bathing, and livestock, but much of the area these trails covered are very dry.
Yes, you can also die by drinking too much water.
HAHA i dont think so. Drinking too much water doesn't give you gas but overdoing the water drinking can cause drowning yourself.
Because it was 'life's blood' to them - it provided water for irrigation, transport, travel, drinking and after the floods, very fertile soil.
There are no naturally occurring surface water sources in the UAE, it is a desert. There are some underground aquifers, but most of these are now over used or contaminated by saltwater (sea). Fresh water for drinking is provided by coastal desalination plants which convert sea water to potable (drinking quality) water. Much of the irrigated "green space" around and through Dubai is provided by STP water or "grey-water" from the sewerage recycling plants.
What? No!
NO. You would not survive drinking that much water. Drinking a lot of water in a short time destroys the body's chemical balance. Drinking 3 quarts in a day could be dangerous; and five gallons is 20 quarts.
Less than 1%Explanation: Just 2.5% of the planet's water is fresh. Less than 1% is readily available for human consumption because some of the fresh water is stored in the form of ice bergs.actually, it is 4.04% of the world's water is fresh water