Powers reserved for the states include any powers not specifically designated to the federal government in the United States Constitution. So, laws and policies concerning education within a state, or laws and policies regarding business, trade and industry in a state would be examples of "reserved powers" the states hold. Specific punishments for crimes committed within the states would also be an example. (Note, for instance, that some states have a death penalty for those convicted of murder, and other states do not have a death penalty.) Any laws and powers exercised by the states still must be in accord with what is stated in the US Constitution, however.
The idea of powers reserved to the states is stated in the 10th Amendment of the Constitution: "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people." So the "reserved powers" of the states is a very broad category that could include many examples.
The pattern of spending, taxing, and providing grants in the federal system.Federal funding appropriated by Congress for the distribution to state and local governments. Main instrument used by the nationalgovernment to aid and influence states.
<span>When it rains in the mountains it causes flashfloods so it is unsafe to go camping in low ground or mountainside until the rains are over. The water is collected using dams. The rest either forms temporary small lakes or is absorbed by the porous sand into ground water table, people traditionally dug wells to get to that water (for farms they will set-up a mill-type contraption to get the water out continuously for irrigation). The rest (above ground) evaporates.
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Himaliya edge
Gobi desert
YELLOW RIVER