It could become a waterfall. Or if it just flows over onto more land then it becomes a river, not a stream.
If a well were drilled near the stream and lowered the water table, it could lead to reduced stream flow, potentially causing the stream to dry up or decrease in size. This change could negatively impact local wildlife that relies on the stream for habitat and drinking water. Additionally, residents might experience changes in groundwater availability for their own use, potentially leading to conflicts over water resources and affecting vegetation and landscaping in the area.
nothing
When it rains, water flows over the Earth's surface as surface runoff. This occurs when the soil is saturated or unable to absorb additional water, causing excess water to move across the land. Surface runoff can lead to the formation of streams, rivers, and eventually contributes to larger bodies of water like lakes and oceans. It also plays a crucial role in the water cycle, helping to replenish groundwater and maintain ecosystems.
Rivers are kept full by thawing snow in higher elevations that run downhill for centuries along the same path....as time goes by, the river digs deeper and deeper into the ground. There are actually lots of rivers in the deserts, they are all just covered up by sand and underground.---When rain falls, some of it sinks into the ground, but not of it. The water that flows over land is called surface runoffor overland flow. Overland flows remove soil and rock, and carve out channels and streams. These channels eventually deepen into rivers.
continental shelf
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It could probably be a canal or a stream.
Rapids
A noisy little stream is called a babbling brook. As the water flows over the pebbles in the stream it creates the noise.
b the volume of water that flows over time
A river or a stream fits this decription...
A flood happens when water over flows from to much rain and over flows the city/village/etc........ also, when it rain for so long and rain so hard
when the water flows over earth materials the earth materials start to increase into a river and it will have lots and lots of meanders in there
When rainwater flows into a stream, it is called runoff. Runoff is the movement of water over the land surface, ultimately reaching streams, rivers, and bodies of water.
When a stream of water flows over mineral salts, it can dissolve the salts, leading to the leaching of minerals into the water. This process can alter the water's chemistry, increasing its mineral content, which may affect aquatic life and the surrounding ecosystem. Additionally, the dissolved minerals can deposit elsewhere along the stream or in bodies of water, contributing to sediment formation or mineral buildup.
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No because there stickiness... Unless it rains a lot and it over flows and the water is to fast.