The correct answer is - kilometers.
Very often, the map scale is showing distances in both miles and kilometers. The reason for this that the majority of the countries in the world use the metric system, thus the kilometers are a must, but also there countries that do not use this system, thus they include the miles. In this way, the map scale can be used by people that both use and not use the metric system in their daily lives.
The map scale is a very important element on the maps. Its purpose is to enable the reader of the map to be able to measure the distance from one place to another, thus to be aware of the real distance in the real space.
Answer: khadar -plain those that are low-lying next to river,Khadar areas are prone to flooding and sometimes include portions of former river-beds that became available for agriculture when a river changed course
(ii)western ghats_ a mountain range that covers an area of 140,000 square kilometres in a stretch of 1,600 kilometres parallel to the western coast of the Indian peninsula, traversing the states of Kerala, Tamil Nadu,karnataka etc.
*anamudi is the highest peak in western ghats
#eastern ghats-they are the range of mountains along India's eastern coast. The Eastern Ghats run from the northern Odisha through Andhra Pradesh and tamilnadu..The mountain ranges run parallel to the Bay of Bengal.
*jindhgada is the highest peak in eastern ghats..
hope this is helpful to you....
The answer is rainforests. The destruction of rainforests can lead to global warming due to the accumulation of carbon dioxide as a greenhouse gas in the atmosphere. This is because rainforests are major carbon sinks because they sequester carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. One of the major rainforests that are facing the threat of human activities is the Amazon and Congo forests.
The answer is south america’s location atop the Nazca and South American plates of the circum-pacific belt. The circum-pacific belt is also known as the ‘ring of fire’ because there is a subduction zone in the region. The Cocos plate is subducting under the Caribbean Plate. This creates friction between the two plates with occasional release of high amounts of energies when a stuck region gets unstuck abruptly. This region accounts for approximately 90% of the world’s earthquakes.