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"Issues" refers to where a spring or stream issues from the ground
in stream valleys
Sodium leaves and re-enters. So does water. It filters blood and regulates water levels so it takes out h2o if the body doesn't require it as well as getting rid of waste in the blood stream
The alcohol firsts enters your body through the mouth. It then travels down into your lungs and then enters into your blood stream.
In air breathing animals, oxygen enters the blood stream through the alveoli, tiny sacs in the lungs. In water breathing animals oxygen enters the blood stream through the gills.
Oxygen enters the blood stream through the air sacs in you lungs.
An anabranch is a diverging branch of a river, creek, or stream which re-enters the main stream.
A. T Rutledge has written: 'Model-estimated ground-water recharge and hydrograph of ground-water discharge to a stream' -- subject(s): Artificial groundwater recharge, Computer simulation, Groundwater flow, Measurement 'A computer program for converting rectangular coordinates to latitude-longitude coordinates' -- subject(s): Computer programs, Grids (Cartography), Cartography
"Groundwater flow is the movement of water that travels and seeps through soil and rock underground. Stored in cavities and geologic pores of the earth's crust, confined groundwater is under a great deal of pressure. Its upper part is lower than the material in which it is confined. Unconfined groundwater is the term for an aquifer with an exposed water surface."
The area where a freshwater river or stream enters the ocean is called an estuary. It is a coastal area of brackish water formed when freshwater enters the ocean.
A disappearing stream. As simple as that.
Yes, capillaries form a network around the alveoli. It is through the alveolar walls and into the capillaries that oxygen enters the blood stream. Carbon dioxide leaves the blood by the reverse route.