that's because when rain in the clouds get combined and heavy enough to fall it falls to ground but it only does this by only when it gets enough water to condense and form rain there is more water in the ocean so its only likely that it rains more in the ocean than land but there is times it rains on land from weather and storms
Evaporation from the oceans and rain over land.
we get rain round year some times in the spring sometimes in the winter sometimes in the fall it can rain for weeks straight
according to the USGS, 1" of rain peracre = 27,154 gallons; so 1" of rain on 100 acres would be 2,715,400 gallons
Yes, sometimes.
There are no crops grown in the Amazon rain Forest. A rain forest is an area of land covered in Trees and plant life to have a farm land in the rain forest would no longer make it a rain forest.
Evaporation from the oceans and rain over land.
sometimes they do
Rain in a Dry Land was created in 2007.
"The Land of Little Rain" by Mary Austin was first published in 1903.
Cooler temperatures occur when air traveling over land travels over the sea, cools, and then returns back over land. Rain is also more likely since the air picked up moisture while over the sea.
In most views, yes. Rain, while it can be inconvenient, is essentially to nearly all life on land. Hail does not have any benefits over rain, but large hail is dangerous.
Mostly either rain or wind, depends on where they met. Over an ocean, you might have a hurricane. Over land you can have wind, rain, or a tornado.
The duration of Rain in a Dry Land is 1.37 hours.
in the united states it is called a hurricane
Rain is water drops falling, storms are strong winds. Sometimes you have rain w/o wind, sometimes there's wind/w/o rain, sometimes you get them both together.
It evaporates, and forms clouds. Clouds blow over land, and rain. Rain runs into rivers, which run into the lake.
There are many ways in which the rain erodes the land. The rain washes away dirt and wears down stone.