After the water leaves the atmosphere half it falls to the earth and becomes groundwater, (water under the ground). And the other half is absorbed by plants. When the plants start to lose water from under their leaves through tiny holes called pores, this step is the next step in the water cycle. This step is called "Condensation".
Temperature fluctuations in the western oceans are much more dramatic than in the eastern oceans. This results in increased rainfall. Around 95,000 cubic miles of rain falls over the world's oceans each year, more than half of which falls in the western oceans.
what happened when lizard fall on our chest
If a baby mouse falls three inches, it is unlikely to be injured. Baby mice are very small and light, so a short fall like this is not usually harmful. It is important to make sure the baby mouse is returned to its nest or cared for properly to ensure its well-being.
The water rises for 6 hours then falls for 6 hours in a cycle.
The Horseshoe falls are also known as the Canadian falls, and is part of Niagra falls. The Horseshoe falls are 2,201 ft (671meters) wide, and 174 ft high (53 meters).
Rain falls from clouds to Earth's surface in the form of liquid water droplets.
Seeps into the ground and becomes groundwater.
Fresh water
Precipitation
Rain: The condensed water vapor that first evaporated from the earths surface (see water cycle)
rain
Precipitation is the term used to describe water falling to the Earth's surface from the atmosphere in the form of rain, snow, sleet, or hail. This process is essential for replenishing water sources and sustaining ecosystems.
It is called precipitation.
Yes, it is correct.
The liquid has 'precipiated' out of it's previous solution - so the rain/sleet/snow is precipitation.
Precipitation that falls on Earth's surface can either be absorbed by the ground, flow into rivers and lakes, evaporate back into the atmosphere, or runoff into oceans. This water plays a crucial role in supporting ecosystems, filling aquifers, and maintaining the water cycle.
it breaks and melts... duh ^^^^^^^^^BTW I"M The one who wrote down here and your answer SUCKS Many people says it melts, but it actually falls, makes snow, then melts, and makes condensation. ^^^^^^ The answer above this paragraph will NOT help you don't use it in your Home Work I researched 4 you!!! Hope this helps!!!