The New Childrens Encyclopedia

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
48

Precious water


Without water, life on Earth could not exist. This


vital resource fills the world’s oceans, lakes, and rivers


or soaks into the earth to form groundwater. A small


fraction of the world’s water exists as ice


or water vapor in the air, or is held


inside the bodies of animals and plants.


FRESH WATER
The salty seas and oceans make up 97 percent
of the world’s water. The rest is fresh water, and
most of it is locked away in the polar ice caps
and glaciers. The fresh water we drink comes
from lakes, ponds, and rivers and accounts for
just 0.6 percent of the world’s water supply.

Water cycle Water moves through a continuous
cycle between the oceans, the atmosphere, and
the land. The water cycle provides fresh water,
which is essential to life on Earth.

Rivers channel
the water back
toward the ocean.

EARTH


O The Caspian Sea is the largest inland
body of water in the world.
O Lake Baikal in Siberia is the world’s
deepest freshwater lake and the largest
by volume.
O Lake Superior in North America
has the largest surface area of any lake in
the world.
O The Dead Sea on the border of Israel
and Jordan is the world’s lowest lake and
also one of the saltiest.

FAST FACTS


Most of the
world’s water is
held in the oceans.

Plants release
water into the air
by a process called
transpiration.

The reservoir that forms
behind a dam supplies
people with water.

Some water soaks
through the soil to
form groundwater.

The Sun warms the
ocean, and fresh
water evaporates
into the air.

The clouds
release water
as precipitation
(rain or snow).

Water runs down
the slopes to form
streams and rivers.

A dam interrupts the water
cycle by delaying the return
of water to the ocean.

The Earth’s oceans
contain 324 million
cubic miles (1.36 billion
cubic kilometers)
of water.

7


/^7 


Only 3 percent
of Earth’s water
is fresh water.

As the air rises and
cools over land, the
water condenses
in clouds.
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