97%
only about 3 % is fresh water and less than 1 percent of that is available the rest is frozen in glaciers etc
4 percent
10 percent of dissovled substances
...is fresh water. No. One percent of the world would be totally incorrect if there were a test that would ask you such question. The correct answer would be 3/4. If the water were to be one percent, than that means water will only cover 1/4 of the world and land will cover 3/4 of the world. When you look at a photo of Earth, you can see that most of Earth is covered blue. Blue stands for water. Another way you can think positive is that,think what you would do if you wasted all the water there is on Earth. And you are in the the middle of the winter. How would you get water if there is no rain avilable.You can't get rain to come in the winter time. It will be snow by the time it falls from the sky. This is why we have so much water to last.
Add 5% water
about 1% of the worlds water is available for our use the rest is either frozen or salt water
Approximately 0.3% of the world's water is available for human use as freshwater. The majority of the Earth's water is found in oceans and seas, with only a small fraction being freshwater in lakes, rivers, and underground sources.
Type your answer here... 1 percent water 2 percent ice
for a human. the human supply water usage is 3%. ONLY 3 PERCENT IS DRINKABLE TO HUMANS
Type your answer here... 1 percent water 2 percent ice
97%
98 percent is salt water, so we can not drink that. So then you have 2 percent. But 1 percent of that is in glaciers. So we have access to about 1 percent.
3%
203556664 l
only about 3 % is fresh water and less than 1 percent of that is available the rest is frozen in glaciers etc
Less than 1% of the world's water is available for immediate human use, with the rest being stored in glaciers, ice caps, and underground aquifers.
Roughly 1% of the Earth's water is readily available for human use in the form of lakes, rivers, and groundwater. The rest is stored in ice caps, glaciers, and underground aquifers. Managing this limited freshwater resource sustainably is crucial for meeting the needs of a growing global population.