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Groundwater and runoff are two different things. Groundwater refers to water underground in the aquifers. Runoff ends up back underground by seeping into the soil after a rain. Runoff may also find its way into ditches, retention ponds, lakes,etc.
Groundwater and runoff are two different things. Groundwater refers to water underground in the aquifers. Runoff ends up back underground by seeping into the soil after a rain. Runoff may also find its way into ditches, retention ponds, lakes,etc.
What doesn't evaporate, ends up in the sea.
It ends up underground.
a particular soil's ability to soak up moisture affects runoff rate. Sandy soils soak up a lot of water, so usually have a low runoff rate. Clay is very reluctant to take in water, so water runs off of it - it has a high runoff rate.
Groundwater and runoff are two different things. Groundwater refers to water underground in the aquifers. Runoff ends up back underground by seeping into the soil after a rain. Runoff may also find its way into ditches, retention ponds, lakes,etc.
Groundwater and runoff are two different things. Groundwater refers to water underground in the aquifers. Runoff ends up back underground by seeping into the soil after a rain. Runoff may also find its way into ditches, retention ponds, lakes,etc.
What doesn't evaporate, ends up in the sea.
Groundwater and runoff are two different things. Groundwater refers to water underground in the aquifers. Runoff ends up back underground by seeping into the soil after a rain. Runoff may also find its way into ditches, retention ponds, lakes,etc.
It ends up underground.
Evaporation precipitation and groundwater
a particular soil's ability to soak up moisture affects runoff rate. Sandy soils soak up a lot of water, so usually have a low runoff rate. Clay is very reluctant to take in water, so water runs off of it - it has a high runoff rate.
the snow falls off the mountain and falls onto the ocean
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.
That would be through porous
Well, it all depends. Now that there is global warming, the water could get polluted, and if that meets another body of water, that could be harmful. Nonetheless, we still need runoff for the water cycle to repeat. Otherwise, the ground would soak up the water, and all that would be left is groundwater. So, there are pros and cons if runoff really is a good thing for the environment or not.
Well, it all depends. Now that there is global warming, the water could get polluted, and if that meets another body of water, that could be harmful. Nonetheless, we still need runoff for the water cycle to repeat. Otherwise, the ground would soak up the water, and all that would be left is groundwater. So, there are pros and cons if runoff really is a good thing for the environment or not.