It remains as water vapor, or somewhere else in the water cycle. Some water has probably been stuck as ice in Glaciers for a long, long time, or perhaps stuck as water in the ocean for a long time, but it all still has the potential to evaporate and then become precipitation.
The excess rainwater can run off into streams, rivers, and cause flooding lower down in the valleys before reaching the sea. Excess water may also form pools, and help raise the water level of lakes and reservoirs.
Ground water, surface water, river water, etc.
water ! read the question .. it says WHAT IS WATER tha doesnt sok into ground its water trust me
It becomes run-off going into Streams, rivers, lakes and oceans.
It is called run-off water.
runoff water
Its called groundwater.
eventually sinks or evaporates
Runoff
Runoff
It is called runoff.
there is less water in or on the ground to evaporate and form clouds
It doesnt fool
Well one way it can return to the atmosphere is it can evaporate and go up. Another way is that it can turn to runoff, water that cannot soak into the ground and instead flows across Earths surface.
Runoff
It is called runoff.
Yes, it is a common phenomenon.
Runoff
nobecause if it doesnt evaporate it has no way to come down
A bit of oil on the surface reduce water evaporation.
fresh water doesnt have salt so it doesnt take as long to have the salt evaporate
Easier to evaporate higher up
it doesnt need to be that close but not that far ehtier.
The vapour pressure is different.
yes, evaporation raises salinity because salt doesnt evaporate like water
there is less water in or on the ground to evaporate and form clouds