The three factors that describe the movement of surface water in streams and rivers include agents of movements like air or wind, the bed slope, type of rocks, obstructions (i.e.crops or vegetation present), bed shape, and many other factors.
Answer:
D. rivers, mountains, lakes, and forests.
Explanation:
A geographic information system (GIS) is a computer system that is used for analyzing various locations on Earth's surface or a geographic areas. It is used as a helping tool in planning and monitoring. Major geographic objects used for GIS are: points, lines, and polygons (areas). GIS software has various applications that are used widely in almost all fields of study.
The disadvantages are those of data transfer, of mis-match between data structures in the GIS and in the model, the difficulties for casual users and the difficulties of modifying the model code or hard-wiredparameters.
Rivers, mountains, lakes, and forests are not a member of elements for GIS analysis.
There are many factors that encourage migration, among them are wealth,
education, religion, access to better job opportunities and better
healthcare and personal reasons (family).
Therefore the one factor that does not influence migration is listed in option c:
c. Healthcare and education are not pull factors that encourage migration.
Answer: you can get the answer if you see the time line and the period
Explanation:
<h2>Definition:</h2>
Temperature is a physical property of matter that quantitively expresses a hot and cold. It is the manifestation of thermal energy, present in all matter, which is the source of the occurrence of heat, a flow of energy when the body is in contact with another that is cooler.
<h2>sentence examples:</h2>
•The temperature is 19° degrees which is cold.
•The temperature must be high today!
•The temperature is nice today.
<h2>synonyms:</h2>
•climate
•cold
•condition
•heat
•warmth
•calefaction
•degrees
•febricity
•feverishness
•body heat
•thermal reading
•pyrexia
•incalescence
<h2>antonyms:</h2>
•cool
<h2>origin:</h2>
Late middle English: from French temperature or Latin temperatura, from temperare 'restrain'. the word originally denoted the state of being tempered or mixed, later becoming synonymous with temperament.cthe modern sense dates from the late 17th century.