A reservoir.
precipitation (:
A reservoir.
A reservoir.
Precipitation
Yes, an aquifer is an underground layer of water-bearing rock or sediment that stores and transmits groundwater. It acts like a natural storage pool for water that can be tapped into for various uses such as drinking water and irrigation.
Atmosphere is not a storage pool. It is not a physical reservoir where water is stored, but rather the layer of gases surrounding the Earth.
To accurately answer your question, I would need to know the specific options you are referring to. Common storage pools for water include reservoirs, lakes, and aquifers. If you provide the list of options, I can identify which one does not fit as a water storage pool.
A swimming pool is not a storage pool for phosphorus. Not a good idea!
A storage pool for water is a man-made structure designed to hold and store water, typically for irrigation, drinking water, or recreation purposes. It is different from a natural water body like a pond, lake, or river.
Anything that one keeps water in. For e.g. - a reservoir, a pool, a water bottle etc.
Storage pool is collection of free linked list in the memory.
An exchange pool is a temporary storage area where water is held for a relatively short period before being transferred to another part of the cycle, such as clouds during evaporation. A reservoir, on the other hand, is a more permanent storage location for water, like lakes or oceans. In the water cycle, an example of an exchange pool is the atmosphere, where water vapor exists before precipitation, while a reservoir example is the ocean, which stores the majority of Earth's water.