Rainfall in a dense jungle can vary, but on average, it can receive between 80 to 400 inches of rain per year. This high amount of rainfall contributes to the lush and diverse vegetation found in these ecosystems.
Around 5,200 tons of space material, such as dust and meteorites, falls onto Earth each year. Most of this material burns up in the atmosphere and never reaches the surface.
Jungles are Rainforests. Rainforests are Jungles. So to answer your question they can be found from Canada to America to Brazil. Also, from Africa to India to Australia. Even though there are many locations of Jungles there isn't really much Jungle left compared to what it used to be which is sad because the Jungle is my favourite place in the world. --------------------------------- Check out the link below
Climate in the jungle is hot and very humid. There is daily rain and much of the jungle is covered in swamps. The temperature rises to the high 80's during the day and drops to the high 60's at night.
If too much rain or snow falls at once, it can lead to flooding, landslides, or avalanches. Excessive rainfall can overwhelm drainage systems, causing water to accumulate and flood low-lying areas. Heavy snowfall can increase the risk of avalanches in mountainous regions and cause roofs to collapse under the weight.
During the water cycle, approximately 78 of the water that evaporates falls back as rain.
1225 mm
1,000ton
43646747 precipitation
about $200,000,000
10 buckets
About a foot per year.
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Its almost 50000mm in a year
sorry i don't know
it falls up to over 38.12 a year because of all of the activity their.
i think its about 330mm per year
i don't know just tell me