A drainage basin, sometimes called a watershed, is an area where all surface water shares the same drainage outlet. Surface water consists of the tiny trickles of water flowing on the surface of the Earth that develop into larger streams and eventually combine to form a river.
Rivers are organized into networks, each with its own recharge area upstream, and drainage channel and mouth downstream. Networks are ordered from ocean to main river to secondary rivers to streams which correspond to ocean basins, river basins, sub-basins, sub-sub-basins, and so forth. The boundary of a watershed is called a drainage divide.
In a drainage basin, water flows from high to low, from upstream
to downstream. Basin recharge is a function of precipitation, soil
and bedrock permeability, absorption of water in the soil by plant
roots, and evapotranspiration. As part of the latter process, plants
return moisture to the atmosphere by transpiration, and the water
eventually returns to Earth in the form of precipitation (for example
as water, snow or hail).
[D] Click for larger version, 18 KB Wilberforce falls on the Hood River, Northwest Territories
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