What is the answer
True. The water on Earth is believed to be the same water that was present when the Earth was first formed, as water is a finite resource that cycles through the environment in a process called the water cycle.
Earth does not produce water. The water currently on Earth is believed to have been here since shortly after Earth formed. Water on Earth goes through cycles between the atmosphere, the oceans, and glaciers.. Some water vapor is released by volcanoes, but this is balanced by water carried into the mantle at subduction zones.
The total amount of water on Earth remains relatively constant because water undergoes the hydrological cycle, where it is continually recycled through processes like evaporation, condensation, and precipitation. While water may change states or locations, the total amount of water on Earth overall remains the same.
the water the earth was formed with
The water amount is the same today as it has been for more then a million years. The Earth has the same water as it has had forever. You are drinking the same water that Hannah Montana or Jessica Simson drank yeaster day. I hope this answers your Q. so the answer is TRUELove,Lolishios
According to most scientists, we have had virtually the same amount of water on Earth since the planet formed. That would mean that there was the same amount of water on Earth when the dinosaurs existed. However, it is important to note that there is probably an infinitesimal amount more water now then there was in the time of the dinosaurs, simply because of the fact that there have been meteors/meteorites that carried a little bit of water to Earth since the dinosaurs died out.
True. The water on Earth is believed to be the same water that was present when the Earth was first formed, as water is a finite resource that cycles through the environment in a process called the water cycle.
Yes - the Earth has a finite amount of water on it. This water cycles between the oceans and the atmosphere.
No, the amount of water stays the same on Earth. :-/
Simply by coincidence Earth and Venus accumulated close to the same amount of material when they formed.
Earth does not produce water. The water currently on Earth is believed to have been here since shortly after Earth formed. Water on Earth goes through cycles between the atmosphere, the oceans, and glaciers.. Some water vapor is released by volcanoes, but this is balanced by water carried into the mantle at subduction zones.
The amount of water on earth does not change. Some of it may become ice, or melt into water, but the global amount is always the same.
The amount of crust present on Earth always stays the same. The amount of crust descending into the mantle is balanced by the amount of crust formed at mid-ocean ridges.
If you mean liquid water, then the Earth is the only planet. Mars has water ice in abundance but if melted, would probably not be anywhere near as plentiful as Earth. NASA calculates that if all the water ice was melted, Mars could be covered by water to a depth of 11m. So, as of 2010, no known planets have the same amount of water as Earth.
The total amount of water on Earth remains relatively constant because water undergoes the hydrological cycle, where it is continually recycled through processes like evaporation, condensation, and precipitation. While water may change states or locations, the total amount of water on Earth overall remains the same.
nothing is constant in the earth.everything changes every second in the earth.
During global warming all of the water was frozen leading to not much water now that it got warmer (green house affect ) there is more water now than then written by a fifth grader