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There is no land or water on the sun.
no there is more water than land
A piece of land almost surrounded by water is a peninsula, or a spit. A piece of land completely surrounded by water is an island.
Territorial water refers to the extent of the sovereignty of a coastal State beyond the land territory.
Riparian right is the type of ownership rights that is associated with the land that abuts water.
It pertains to the land and anything permanently attached to it such as a house or water well, and any rights that are appurtenant to the land.It pertains to the land and anything permanently attached to it such as a house or water well, and any rights that are appurtenant to the land.It pertains to the land and anything permanently attached to it such as a house or water well, and any rights that are appurtenant to the land.It pertains to the land and anything permanently attached to it such as a house or water well, and any rights that are appurtenant to the land.
In the United States, water rights are associated with land ownership. Any person, entity or organization that owns the land owns the rights to the water on that land (unless he, it, they sell the rights). Also, any person, entity or organization that has used water from a moving source such as a river has rights to use that water in the future. The use and distribution of the water in times of drought or increased population causes the rights to water to get tricky and contentious. There is a federal court system in the South West United States that deals only with rater rights issues. That aside individuals CAN own water rights.
No. Water rights are in a different category than mineral rights. There are different types of water rights: surface and subsurface. Those rights are treated differently. A landowner has a more exclusive right to subsurface water. When purchasing land in some areas where the water and mineral rights have been separated from the land rights it is extremely important to have the title examined by a professional culminating in a detailed report of the status of all those rights.
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.
Territorial waters refer to the area of ocean extending up to 12 nautical miles from a nation's coastline. These waters are recognized as sovereign territory of the coastal state, giving them certain rights and jurisdiction over the resources and activities within. Other countries have the right of innocent passage through these waters, but the coastal state maintains control and authority over them.
an expansion of land
Yes, giraffes are territorial and they compete for land.
an expansion of land
No. Water rights generally are not part of land ownership.
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