Continents.
the cloud in atmmosphere and soil in lithosphere
Water can be stored above the lithosphere in various places, such as in lakes, rivers, and glaciers on the Earth's surface. Additionally, water can also be stored in the atmosphere as clouds and in the polar ice caps.
Clouds are primarily composed of water droplets or ice crystals formed from water vapor in the atmosphere. While hydrogen is present in trace amounts in Earth's atmosphere, it is not a major component of clouds.
Yes, water vapor is a key component of clouds. When warm, moist air rises and cools in the atmosphere, the water vapor condenses into tiny droplets around particles like dust or salt. These droplets eventually come together to form clouds.
The atmosphere, the lithosphere, and the hydrosphere.You're welcome ^.^
Grass Geysers...Carbon Clouds was created on 2007-10-09.
clouds, continents, oceans.
Yes
the cloud in atmmosphere and soil in lithosphere
Water can be stored above the lithosphere in various places, such as in lakes, rivers, and glaciers on the Earth's surface. Additionally, water can also be stored in the atmosphere as clouds and in the polar ice caps.
Oceans, Lakes, Rivers, Glaciers, Waterfalls, Geysers, Underground aquifers, and Rain clouds (including rain, mist and fog).
Yes,because the water from the clouds bring down and touches the ground and not all of the trees absorbs that much of water so the rain touches the ground and goes inside the land then ocuppies space in land and makes holes so waters from the ocean going through those holes and occupies much space inside the land and the continents will will move and separate
Clouds are primarily composed of water droplets or ice crystals formed from water vapor in the atmosphere. While hydrogen is present in trace amounts in Earth's atmosphere, it is not a major component of clouds.
Yes, water vapor is a key component of clouds. When warm, moist air rises and cools in the atmosphere, the water vapor condenses into tiny droplets around particles like dust or salt. These droplets eventually come together to form clouds.
The atmosphere, the lithosphere, and the hydrosphere.You're welcome ^.^
Water moves through the hydrosphere through processes like evaporation, precipitation, and runoff. In the lithosphere, water can percolate through the soil and rocks to become groundwater. In the atmosphere, water evaporates from bodies of water, condenses to form clouds, and falls back to the surface as precipitation.
The sunlight enters as UV radiation, it is absorbed by the lithosphere and so drops in energy, therefore it is re-radiated out as the longer-waved infrared radiation. The amount any area absorbs is dependant on the albedo effect, dark areas absorb a lot, while high albedo areas (such as snowy/ icy areas) reflect most of it back away from the Earth as UV. Uv can also be reflected back before reaching the lithosphere by clouds and airborne particles such as sulphur dioxide (hence the drop in global temperatures seen after major volcanic eruptions). Infrared radiation from the lithosphere can leave the Earth or be captured, absorbed then re-radiated back down to the ground by clouds (which is why it's always warmer in the morning after a cloudy night).