Earth's surface diagram

Earth's surface diagram

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Dr Jekyll

Original Poster:

23,820 posts

267 months

Saturday 2nd October 2021
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If this is accurate, the amount covered by fresh water seems surprisingly small.

ARFBY

478 posts

139 months

Saturday 2nd October 2021
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If you imagine for a moment, all of the build up areas around the world, the huge "Concrete Jungles", the sprawling cities and such; All of the worlds fresh water covering the same area seems a pretty good amount.


FWIW

3,139 posts

103 months

Saturday 2nd October 2021
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An interactive version of that would be interesting. Showing how the ratios have changed over a few thousand years.

The Wookie

14,031 posts

234 months

Friday 8th October 2021
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If it’s accurate I think the agriculture segment is the scariest bit of that chart personally. Obviously they’ve put it next to forests for that exact reason but it really does drill home why deforestation happens

Flooble

5,567 posts

106 months

Friday 15th October 2021
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ARFBY said:
If you imagine for a moment, all of the build up areas around the world, the huge "Concrete Jungles", the sprawling cities and such; All of the worlds fresh water covering the same area seems a pretty good amount.
It is fascinating how animal life requires fresh water not salt water - distinctly limiting in many respects. But then, obtaining salt water away from the coast would be even harder.

TwigtheWonderkid

44,407 posts

156 months

Friday 15th October 2021
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Flooble said:
It is fascinating how animal life requires fresh water not salt water - distinctly limiting in many respects.
Plenty of stuff in the sea doing perfectly ok with salt water.

glazbagun

14,430 posts

203 months

Friday 15th October 2021
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Flooble said:
ARFBY said:
If you imagine for a moment, all of the build up areas around the world, the huge "Concrete Jungles", the sprawling cities and such; All of the worlds fresh water covering the same area seems a pretty good amount.
It is fascinating how animal life requires fresh water not salt water - distinctly limiting in many respects. But then, obtaining salt water away from the coast would be even harder.
The lightbulb thing for me a while back was the realisation that freshwater was a finite resource. Not finite like oil or gold, but with a fairly hard limit on how quickly it replenishes. In Scotland this limit seemed plenty high enough, but globally optimising its use is clearly a big deal.

Soloman Dodd

312 posts

48 months

Saturday 16th October 2021
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Yes, but Glaciers are freshwater too. Surprising ratio for those two.