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This system is similar to tiny streams, rivers, lakes and oceans.
They are ribosomes.
Frankly this question is akin to asking what role water plays in streams, puddles, rivers, lakes, rain, or steam; Clouds are made up of water droplets tiny enough to be suspended in the sky by air currents. No water = no clouds.
Everyday, the heat of the sun cause water on the Earth's surface to change into a gas. This process is known as evaperation or evaporation.
he built a microscope .
This system is similar to tiny streams, rivers, lakes and oceans.
the tiny pieces of rock settle on the bottom of lakes,rivers and oceans
Most is extracted from underground aquifers and some other from rivers and lakes. A tiny proportion is obtained from desalination plants.
the tiny pieces of rock settle on the bottom of lakes,rivers and oceans
Neither. Platypuses feed on tiny crustaceans and insect larvae that live on the bottom of freshwater creeks, rivers and lakes.
Under the ground for the most part. A tiny fraction of the water we use if desalinated water from the oceans. Some also comes from lakes and rivers.
All animals have a diet. The platypus's diet is primarily tiny crustaceans and insect larvae that live on the bottom of freshwater creeks, rivers and lakes. (They do not eat fish.)
Wild animals do not go on diets, but they do have a diet. The platypus's diet is primarily tiny crustaceans and insect larvae that live on the bottom of freshwater creeks, rivers and lakes. (They do not eat fish.)
Platypuses find their food on the bottom of freshwater rivers, creeks and lakes. They eat insect larvae, worms, tiny fush and crustaceans that live on riverbed floors, finding them by means of the sensitive electroreceptors on their bills. They then shovel their food up from the mud on the floor of the waterway.
Mostly by putting too much fertilizer in your yard, then watering it takes those chemicals into tiny streams of water to your nearest water supply (lakes, rivers, large ponds) and harms organisms in the water.
The sun evaporates water from lakes and oceans. As the air rises, it cools. The water vapor condenses into tiny droplets of water. The droplets crowd together and form a cloud. Wind blows the cloud (you answered 'droplet') towards the land. The tiny droplets join together and fall as precipitation to the ground. The water soaks into the ground and collects in rivers and lakes. The cycle that never ends has started again!
The sun's heat melts puddles and parts of oceans, rivers, and lakes and they go up to the sky, gather together and form a cloud. For more info, contact at ealmazo1326@gmail.com