Rain and Rivers

A free interactive lesson on rain and rivers — how only 3% of Earth's water is fresh, how rivers begin as mountain streams and flow to the sea, and how rivers provide drinking water, farming and electricity. Class 4 Science. Includes a quick quiz.

Class 4 ScienceClass 4 / Grade 4Ages 6–9
Lesson
🌧️ Rain and Rivers
Rain is Earth's freshwater delivery system!river97% of Earth's water is salty — rain gives us the rest!

Nearly all the water on Earth — ninety-seven percent — is salty ocean water that we cannot drink. The freshwater we need for drinking, cooking, and farming comes almost entirely from rain. When rain falls on the land, it flows downhill, joining streams, which join rivers, which eventually reach the sea. Rivers are nature's pipes carrying freshwater across entire continents.

Why are rivers important?

Rivers have supported human civilisations for thousands of years. Ancient civilisations grew along the Ganga, Nile, Yangtze, and Indus rivers because of the fertile soil and water supply.

Today rivers provide: drinking water (treated and distributed through pipes), irrigation (canals carry water to farmland), and hydroelectricity (dams use flowing water to generate power).

How scarce is freshwater?

Only 3% of all water on Earth is fresh. Of that, most is locked in glaciers and ice caps. Only a tiny fraction exists in rivers, lakes, and accessible underground aquifers — yet it must supply billions of people, all farming, and all ecosystems. This is why conserving freshwater is critical.

Frequently asked questions

Where do rivers begin?

Rivers begin as small streams in mountains or hills, fed by rainfall and melting snow. These streams merge to form larger rivers that flow downhill toward the sea.

What is a delta?

A delta is the fan-shaped area where a river meets the sea and deposits the sediment (soil and sand) it has carried. The Ganga-Brahmaputra delta in India and Bangladesh is one of the largest.

Why is river water not safe to drink directly?

River water can contain bacteria, pollutants, and sediment. It must be filtered and treated at water treatment plants before it is safe to drink.

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