Water is defined as one of the renewable natural resources of the
planet, one of the basic elements on Earth, and one of the most important
things that makes it unique as a chemical compound is its stability; the amount
of water present on Earth is the same amount of water that has been since the
creation of God. Water occupies 70.9% of the Earth's surface area.
What if the water disappears? What will life look like on Earth? Will
life continue?
Climate change affects us all in this world, but you can see the
repercussions in particular in the seas and oceans, especially the northern
regions, where the ice cap around the Arctic is melting and the ocean
temperature there is rising. And we may expect sea levels to rise dramatically
this century, and it will get worse in the next few centuries.
Clouds become a thing of the past, being made up of water evaporation.
However, rain, snow, hurricanes and storms disappear. The only weather
variations will be wind patterns.
The disappearance of water means the disappearance of the poles.
As its snow cover disappears, Antarctica will become a barren land
highlighted by mountain ranges and huge valleys.
Plant life will eventually fade as it has lost the source of life,
water, and animals and humans.
Our Earth will take the form of a huge desert, and the planet will see
similar boiling temperatures. Without the oceans, carbon dioxide will spread into the atmosphere,
raising temperatures to record temperatures similar to that of Venus, which
lives at 460 degrees Celsius.
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