something bad will happen that's all I can say.
As water travels through the soil and rock layers, particles and contaminants are filtered out by physical straining, absorption, and chemical reactions. The soil and rock act as natural filters, trapping impurities and allowing cleaner water to gradually percolate down to underground aquifers. This natural process helps to clean and purify the water before it is stored in these underground reservoirs.
All waste water travels to a water treatment site through underground pipes and is filtered clean before being released.
It will result in spread of desert areas and exhaust of underground water resources.
water travels in a line :)
Underground water is called underground water, because it is "underground" not because it is fresh or salt. You can have underground salt water reservoirs just like you can have fresh water ones.
False. Impermeable materials do not allow water to pass through, so water would not be able to travel underground through layers of rocks and soil that are impermeable. Water typically travels through permeable materials such as sand and gravel.
Underground water is cleaner.
Actually, sound travels slower under water than underground. Sound is a vibration in molecules that we perceive as noise. Water's molecules are rather loose compared to a solid's molecules, so it would travel slower underwater compared to traveling underground.
yes, because the water cycle is constant, and if water that evaporates in the sea travels as water vapour over land and rains then the rain can soak in and run back to lakes as water underground.(throughflow)
Yes, erosions can happen underground through processes such as underground water flow dissolving rock formations, cave formation through solution erosion, and soil erosion caused by water movement in underground aquifers. These processes may lead to the formation of caverns, tunnels, and other underground features over time.
you know when there is water underground when you here the sound of water...(underground)...or see water on your lawn when there is no liquid to be found... : )
Everywhere water is frequenly in contact with rocks. Like seashores, rivers, underground caves etc...