No because rivers don't have as much salt as the ocean.
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Yes they do but in very low concentrations, and using the word "salt" in its full sense, not just sodium chloride..
The water supply in the oceans is part of the Earth's hydrological cycle, where water evaporates from the surface, condenses into clouds, and falls back to the surface as precipitation. Oceans cover about 71% of the Earth's surface, acting as the primary reservoir for this water. The constant movement of water through evaporation, precipitation, and ocean currents helps maintain a balanced supply. Additionally, rivers and streams feed into the oceans, replenishing their water content.
Oceans Large rivers Glaciers Smaller rivers Water vapour, as in a cloud
Yes oceans drive water cycle supply. Water is evaporated from oceans.
The water in the oceans come from the rivers!
large water bodies of rivers are called as oceans!!!
Water from rivers and streams.
Most of Earth's total water supply is found in the oceans, which contain about 97% of the planet's water. The remaining 3% is found in glaciers, ice caps, groundwater, lakes, rivers, and in the atmosphere.
Because it just is recycled. The water cycle moves water out of oceans and rivers into the atmosphere. It falls as precipitation and runs into rivers and dams. We drink it and wash in it and flush it back into the rivers where the sun soaks it up into the atmosphere again. A cycle!
One main difference between oceans and rivers is that oceans are made up of salt water while rivers are made up of fresh water. A river follows a course while oceans surround the continents and are very large.
No, rivers typically have fresh water, not salt water. Salt water is found in oceans and seas.
from oceans lakes and rivers
Water, Rivers, Lakes, Oceans