source
The source of a river - is the point at which it emerges as a stream from the water that forms its origin. This is usually run-off from boggy ground, at a higher altitude than sea level.
False. The recharge of a stream refers to the process by which water from precipitation or other sources infiltrates into the ground to replenish underground water supplies, such as aquifers. It is not defined by the volume of water flowing past a given point in the stream at a certain time.
a discharge of a stream is the amount of water flowing past a certain point in a given unit of time.
The Medieval English origin of Caslake is a lost village named from the Old English words cerse, meaning cress, and lacu, meaning stream. The literal translation is a stream where water cress grew.
From the French word meaning a stream of water. This was later used to refer to any engine that functioned by emitting a stream of water, gas, fuel, etc.
it would bend towards the point of origin or where it starts.
its the point of origin
A geyser is formed when a spring is geothermally heated to the point that water underground reaches its boiling point and erupts through the surface in an upward stream of water and water vapor. The pressure from the boiling water builds up underground until it is released in a geyser eruption.
Stream flow, or discharge, is the volume of water that moves over a designated point over a fixed period of time. - Google
geyser
A point bar is formed on the inside of a meandering stream because the water flow slows down on the inside of the bend, causing the water to deposit sediment. This deposition of sediment builds up over time, creating a point bar.
a cross sectional view of a stream from its source, or head waters, to its mouth the point downstream where the river empties into another body of water.