What doesn't evaporate, ends up in the sea.
I KNOW that runoffs eventually go to rivers,streams, and then it goes to the ocean so the answer is OCEAN
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.
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.
What doesn't evaporate, ends up in the sea.
I KNOW that runoffs eventually go to rivers,streams, and then it goes to the ocean so the answer is OCEAN
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.
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.
the snow falls off the mountain and falls onto the ocean
That would be through porous
washing dishes, clothes, Etc. feces exhaling cleaning
When farmers spray their crops with pesticide or fertiliser, it doesn't just vanish. It lands on the soil. Most farms have drainage systems so that their plants don't get root rot from waterlogged soil. Most of these drains eventually run into creeks, rivers and then the sea. These chemicals then end up in water supplies that we drink. It can also mean that 'organic' food is actually not because it has been irrigated with water containing chemical runoff.
They End Up Not Where , They Dont Get Their GED , And Most Of Then End Up Having Babies
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.
runoff can pollute a river or stream because when the water flows over the ground, it could pick up some trash or garbage on the ground, and the garbage could flow with the runoff. Then when the runoff enters a stream, lake, or ocean, the garbage will flow into the water, causing pollution.