No, rivers typically have fresh water, not salt water. Salt water is found in oceans and seas.
No, rivers are typically freshwater, not salt water. Salt water comes from oceans and seas, while rivers are fed by sources like rainfall and melting snow.
Rainforest water is typically fresh water, derived from rainfall, rivers, and streams. Salt water bodies such as oceans and seas are not present within a rainforest ecosystem.
Yes, approximately 97% of the Earth's water is salt water found in oceans and seas. The remaining 3% is freshwater found in rivers, lakes, and glaciers.
Approximately 97% of the earth's water is found in the ocean in the form of salt water. The remaining 3% is freshwater found in rivers, lakes, glaciers, and underground aquifers.
Most of the Earth's water contains salt because over millions of years, rain and rivers have washed mineral salts from rocks into the oceans. As water evaporates from the oceans, the salt remains behind, leading to an accumulation of salt in the ocean water. This is why most of Earth's water, especially in the oceans, contains salt.
No, rivers are typically freshwater, not salt water. Salt water comes from oceans and seas, while rivers are fed by sources like rainfall and melting snow.
Salt it is brought by rivers; the lake hasn't drain, water is evaporated and the concentration of salts increase.
Salt is dissolved from deposits in the mountains and transported by the rivers.
Salt water is water that has salt in it and it is found in oceans. Fresh water does not have salt and is found in rivers and lakes.
Salt is dissolved from the earth and transported by rivers in seas and oceans.
Salt is dissolved from the Earth and transported by rivers in seas and oceans.
Salt is dissolved from the earth and transported by the rivers in seas and oceans.
Rivers are fresh water.
yes there is.
Salt water; fishy
Neither
It is salt water, because it is a continuation of the ocean water.