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igneous rocks do absorb water because of all the pores ,cracks, and holes in them. The holes will absorb the water and the water will get trapped in the rock there for igneous rocks do absorb water.
to hold on to the soil, to absorb the water from the soil, to store food
all of these
No, some rock types are porous and will absorb water.
There are a variety of types of trees that absorb a lot of water. One of the most popular trees is the weeping willow.
Not all objects absorb water
The density of all water is 1, no matter the amount or location. Humans have the density of 0.9, so humans barely float in all bodies of water.
igneous rocks do absorb water because of all the pores ,cracks, and holes in them. The holes will absorb the water and the water will get trapped in the rock there for igneous rocks do absorb water.
If you are speaking of a recently formed pool of water, the reason may be that your area has a lot of rain recently and the water was too much for the ground to absorb all at once.
Water is evaporated from all bodies of water.
Its likely known that almost all plants absorb water from the soil
No, water should not be kept in your pool all winter. When it gets cold enough, the water will freeze. When water freezes, it expands. So when the water in your pool freezes and expands your pool will be ruined.
The lay in their water and absorb it through their skin
bodies of water are large portions of water or small portions a lake pond swamp ocean marsh are all bodies of water so are much more
opening a pool is different then closing a pool because opening the pool is when the pool is all filled up with water an fixed an has chlorine in it and closing the pool is if u don't have no chlorine in it and it is not fixed or don't have no water in it
All bodies of water can absorb carbon dioxide; also aquatic vegetation absorb carbon dioxide. But the capacity of normal absorption is limited; if the concentration of carbon dioxide is too high water become more and more acidic and this strongly influence the life in waters.
All the oceans connect to each other. Most lakes are completely enclosed, and are separate from other bodies of water.