Wikibooks: World Stamp Catalogue/British Antarctic Terr

The quantity of water released by the Amazon to the Atlantic Ocean is enormous up to 300 000 cubic metres per second (11 000 000 cu ft/s) in the rainy season with an average of 209 000 cubic metres per second (7 400 000 cu ft/s) from 1973 to 1990.[8] The Amazon is responsible for about 20% of the Ea...

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Online Access:https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/World_Stamp_Catalogue/British_Antarctic_Terr
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spelling ftwikibooks:enwikibooks:60051:305967 2024-06-23T07:47:36+00:00 Wikibooks: World Stamp Catalogue/British Antarctic Terr https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/World_Stamp_Catalogue/British_Antarctic_Terr eng eng Book ftwikibooks 2024-06-09T12:11:50Z The quantity of water released by the Amazon to the Atlantic Ocean is enormous up to 300 000 cubic metres per second (11 000 000 cu ft/s) in the rainy season with an average of 209 000 cubic metres per second (7 400 000 cu ft/s) from 1973 to 1990.[8] The Amazon is responsible for about 20% of the Earth s fresh water entering the ocean.[6] The river pushes a vast plume of fresh water into the ocean. The plume is about 400 kilometres (250 mi) long and between 100 and 200 kilometres (62 and 124 mi) wide. The fresh water being lighter flows on top of the seawater diluting the salinity and altering the color of the ocean surface over an area up to 1 000 000 square miles (2 600 000 km2) in extent. For centuries ships have reported fresh water near the Amazon s mouth yet well out of sight of land in what otherwise seemed to be the open ocean.[4] bookcat Book Antarc* Antarctic WikiBooks - Open-content textbooks Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection WikiBooks - Open-content textbooks
op_collection_id ftwikibooks
language English
description The quantity of water released by the Amazon to the Atlantic Ocean is enormous up to 300 000 cubic metres per second (11 000 000 cu ft/s) in the rainy season with an average of 209 000 cubic metres per second (7 400 000 cu ft/s) from 1973 to 1990.[8] The Amazon is responsible for about 20% of the Earth s fresh water entering the ocean.[6] The river pushes a vast plume of fresh water into the ocean. The plume is about 400 kilometres (250 mi) long and between 100 and 200 kilometres (62 and 124 mi) wide. The fresh water being lighter flows on top of the seawater diluting the salinity and altering the color of the ocean surface over an area up to 1 000 000 square miles (2 600 000 km2) in extent. For centuries ships have reported fresh water near the Amazon s mouth yet well out of sight of land in what otherwise seemed to be the open ocean.[4] bookcat
format Book
title Wikibooks: World Stamp Catalogue/British Antarctic Terr
spellingShingle Wikibooks: World Stamp Catalogue/British Antarctic Terr
title_short Wikibooks: World Stamp Catalogue/British Antarctic Terr
title_full Wikibooks: World Stamp Catalogue/British Antarctic Terr
title_fullStr Wikibooks: World Stamp Catalogue/British Antarctic Terr
title_full_unstemmed Wikibooks: World Stamp Catalogue/British Antarctic Terr
title_sort wikibooks: world stamp catalogue/british antarctic terr
url https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/World_Stamp_Catalogue/British_Antarctic_Terr
geographic Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
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