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lakes and rivers
lakes and rivers and groundwater (underground)
rivers lakes ice sheets glaciers groundwater and geysers
Fresh water can be found in various locations on Earth, including rivers, lakes, and groundwater reservoirs such as aquifers. Rivers are bodies of flowing fresh water that typically originate from springs or melting snow. Lakes are large bodies of standing fresh water that can be natural or man-made. Groundwater reservoirs, such as aquifers, are underground layers of permeable rock or sediment that store and transmit fresh water.
salt
the Great Lakes are fresh water.( the largest fresh water lakes in the world.)
fresh
There can be groundwater below lakes but it depends on whether that ground water a supply for the lake or it takes away the water in lake, and the amount that can keep the water in the lake.It also depends on the type of lakes that lake is decides the importance of groundwater.Lakes interact with groundwater in three ways: it can have groundwater in-flow that gives it water, or it can have seepage loss to groundwater, and most lakes have both.
Approximately 69% of fresh water on Earth is in the form of liquid, primarily found in rivers, lakes, and groundwater. The remaining fresh water is stored in frozen form in glaciers and ice caps.
Fresh water covers approximately 0.7% of the Earth's surface, found in locations such as rivers, lakes, and groundwater. Most of Earth's water is found in oceans and seas, which are composed of saltwater.
The earth's fresh water is naturally occurring water that is in ice sheets, ice caps, glaciers, icebergs, bogs, ponds, lakes, rivers and streams, and underground as groundwater in aquifers and underground streams.
Most of Earth's fresh water is stored in glaciers and ice caps, accounting for about 68.7%. The remaining fresh water is primarily found in groundwater (30.1%) and a small fraction in surface water such as lakes, rivers, and streams.