The water that seeps into the ground after it precipitates is called ground water.
The water that seeps into the ground after it precipitates is called ground water.
Due to gravity, water will always flow to the lowest level. Therefore, as part of the water cycle, rain will flow downhill and eventually reach the sea. The rain will also top-up the ground water-table, and fill lakes and reservoirs.
No it stayes in the ground. That's why its called ground water!!
The supply comes from rain. People's supply comes mostly from rivers and lakes.
Lakes exist in Florida because lots of rain causes a hole to form in the ground which over time fills with water and becomes a lake.
a healthy plant has water on the underside of several of its leaves
Rain? Really? Of course its Rain, its called Precipitation!
Water from precipitation that stays on the surface, such as in lakes or streams is "surface water." Water which is absorbed into the ground (and stored in aquifers) is "ground water."
Water is evaporated from the ground and lakes and condenses into water droplets in the clouds. Then the water is released when it gets heavy enough and falls back to the ground as rain and the cycle starts over again.
Accumulation water cycle means that the runoff of water (from rain, snow, hail) runs from higher ground down into the rivers, oceans, lakes, and puddles.
rain water
The main sources of fresh water are as follows : 1) Rain 2) Ground water 3) rivers 4) ponds 5) lakes etc.