|
Water is transported in different forms within the hydrological
cycle or 'water cycle'. Shiklomanov in Gleick (1993) estimates
that each year about 502 800 km3 of water evaporates
over the oceans and seas, 90% of which (458 000 km3)
returns directly to the oceans through precipitation, while the
remainder (44 800 km3) falls over land.
|
With evapo-transpiration totalling about 74 200 km3,
the total volume in the terrestrial hydrological cycle is about 119 000 km3. About 35% of this, or 44 800 km3, is
returned to the oceans as run-off from rivers, groundwater and glaciers.
A considerable portion of river flow and groundwater percolation never
reaches the ocean, having evaporated in internal runoff areas or inland
basins lacking an outlet to the ocean. However, some groundwater that
bypasses the river systems reaches the oceans. Annually the hydrological
cycle circulates nearly 577 000 km3 of water (Gleick, 1993).
|