I take it you mean when you have river front land. You would own the river water that comes over your land. And yes you may take it. Where you would put it is a good question.
When there is no longer enough water in the river behind the dam to turn the turbines.When the reservoir behind the dam silts up too much for the turbines to obtain water anymore. This eventually happens to all dams after several centuries.When drought comes to the country.When countries further up the river take the water for their own hydroelectric energy use, crop irrigation, or keep the water for their own people to drink.etc.
Distributary
No. A watershed involves various sources of water that end up in a river or a bay. The Jordan River watershed includes any water that will find its way in to the Jordan River- which is its own entity.
A river, or stream.
The best thing is if you have a creek or river near by, take a bucket and get some from there. If you don't have a creek, make your own by leaving water outside for 4 days in direct sunlight and don't take out any bugs that fly in the cup or bucket.
The Colorado River Compact has several purposes: 1) to apportion the use of water in the Colorado River Basin (i.e. the Colorado River and all its tributaries); 2) promote interstate comity; and 3) to secure the ability of the Upper Colorado River Basin to develop at its own pace (without the compact, the more populous Lower Basin would have tried to develop a claim as much water as possible--the compact preserves the ability of the Upper Basin to use water).
This quote suggests that life is constantly flowing and changing, much like the water in a river. It implies that life is dynamic, full of movement and growth, and that it requires adaptation to navigate its ever-changing course. Just as a river can carve its own path, so too can we shape our own journey in life.
No. There are land rights and water rights. When people acquire land they don't get the water rights too. If they did that could mean that every few miles someone owns the water. The rivers are state property.
Because there is no air on the moon, in the moon, or on the way to the moon. They have to take their own food and water too.
A seaplane is an airplane that can land on and take off from a water surface under its own power. (Many airplanes can land on water, like during an emergency, but cannot take off from the water surface under their own power.)
the rivers in the present day are -we throw rubish inside -we spoil our own city by destroying the river because the water we get from tap is the river water we pollute. -near temples even near the kabar we throw our flower and plant waste in the river.
The Amazon river is neither. The Amazon River is the world's second largest river, running through the Amazon Rainforest in Brazil And much of Peru.