Gravity holds it on.
yes
A globe or a sphere perhaps?
Snow globes are manufactured by putting a transparent sphere made of glass, in this sphere there is a model of a landscape. The globe is shaken to churn up the white particles. The globe is then placed back in its position and the flakes fall down slowly through the water.
There is no scarcity of water around the globe. It would be flatly impossible. The ocean water keeps on evaporating and falling as rain, just as it has for a billion years.
The ocean would probably overflow and cause a flood to occur.
A globe represents Earth's entire surface.
The water that doesn't evaporate into vapor stays in the ocean as liquid water. The oceans have a lot of liquid water. Over time, ocean water is always evaporating and turning into rain and comes back to the ocean; but the salts and minerals carried into the sea from rivers never evaporate. They stay dissolved in the ocean waters and make it saltier and saltier.
The water displacement of a sphere can be calculated using the formula for the volume of a sphere, which is V = (4/3)πr^3, where r is the radius of the sphere. The volume of water displaced by the sphere is equal to the volume of the sphere when it is submerged in water.
Gravity affects ocean water by pulling it towards the Earth's center, creating tides as the gravitational force between the Earth and the Moon causes the water to bulge. Gravity also influences ocean currents by affecting the circulation patterns of water around the globe.
Water Sphere was created in 2005.
There is an antipodal balance of land and water on directly opposite sides of the globe. It means that the continents and oceans are roughly arranged in such a way that land on one side of the globe is balanced by water on the opposite side of the globe. For example, the North Polar Arctic Ocean is opposite to the Antarctica Continent.
Its heat capacity