Learn about the water cycle and how oceans act as the Earth's water reservoirs


Learn about the water cycle and how oceans act as the Earth's water reservoirs
Learn about the water cycle and how oceans act as the Earth's water reservoirs
The water cycle begins and ends in the ocean.
Created and produced by QA International. © QA International, 2010. All rights reserved. www.qa-international.com

Transcript

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NARRATOR: Each year, more than 500,000 cubic kilometers of water evaporates from the oceans. Yet the ocean level doesn't drop because the water is constantly recycled and ultimately returns to the oceans in various forms.

Water vapor from the oceans gives rise to clouds. Most of the time these clouds drop their precipitation directly into the ocean. But some of them are pushed by the winds and drop their precipitation on land masses. This water either stays on the surface as runoff and forms water courses or infiltrates underground. Some of the infiltrated water is consumed by plants, the rest feed slow-moving subterranean rivers, which return to the ocean directly or flow into surface water courses.

The oceans, where the water cycle begins and ends, are the planet's water reservoirs. They contain more than 95 percent of all the water on Earth.

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