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water which is essential for photosynthesis is absorbed from soil and carbon dioxide is inhale from the atmosphere by the helps of stomata.
The plants are in the runoff and absorb the precipitation and then releases it back into the atmosphere. Then the cycle starts again. Evaporation, Condensation, precipitation and runoff again.
The Plant gets water from the ground through its roots.
They suck them up out of the ground using a system called osmosis. Actually its done by its water potential gradient and transpiration...where the water is transfered through the xylem and the mineral salts in the ploem
How geosphere interacts with biosphere is that they both protect the earth like the atmosphere is the border around earth that keeps us breathing without that we would die. How they would react is that biosphere and is part of the atmosphere so would they react
Groundwater
The collection of groundwater is a fundamental part of the water cycle. The water falls from the sky in the form of rain or snow and runs through the water systems to gather on the earth's surface. As time passes, the water that is not evaporated into the atmosphere to start the cycle over seeps into the ground through cracks in the earth's crust, replenishing the groundwater.
The extration of ground water, commonly via a bore hole drilled into an aquifer is called Tapping groundwater. It is a process in which a pipe and a pump is used to pull water out of the ground.
Infiltration is the process by which rainwater on the ground surface enters the soil.
precipitation seeping through pores and cracks in the ground the main source of groundwater is rain, and melted snow soak
There are big grinders that grind up water and you get ground water. That is what happened in New Orleans they lost their power and they couldn't grind the water into ground water so it flooded.
Groundwater is in the ground, not in lakes or rivers.
groundwater
A WELL is a shaft in the ground used to remove groundwater
ground water Groundwater is located beneath the soil surface. A sustainable amount of ground water creates an aquifer. The point at which the soil and rocks become completely saturated is the water table. Groundwater will flow to the surface naturally. The study of groundwater is hydrogeology.
Groundwater is the cause of erosion so the real question you might be asking is "what will happent to all the soil because of groundwater causing erosion"
nitrogen in the atmosphere and the ground