The answer is option A "Neptune, Uranus, Saturn, and Jupiter" Outer planets are listed in this order also take a look at this link to see proof....
https://www.bing.com/images/search?view=detailV2&ccid=nOu5IiP0&id=BACBDA1F66AD96662D37A4871146D4DFE5...
Hope this helps!
Answer:
Conservation leadership is a term without a widely shared understanding of its scope and meaning. In this article, the author shares perspectives based on interviews, literature and a survey to begin to identify strategies that define conservation leadership. Results indicate that some elements of conservation leadership are similar to strategies of effective leadership more broadly. Conservation leadership also includes distinguishing aspects, however, such as conflict management and partnership-building.
Explanation:
Answer:
D) scandinavian peninsula
Explanation:
Answer:
C. occurs when many atomic bonds are broken quickly and rock pieces separate.
Explanation:
Planet earths Brittle deformation occurs when many atomic bonds are broken quickly and rock pieces separate.
This brittle deformation occurs when rocks along active plate boundaries are subjected to physical stress such as change temperature which causes their atomic bonds to break and the rock becomes shattered, this is termed brittle deformation.
There is also ductile deformation in rocks
-- Earth is one planet is a "Solar System", that consists of everything
that's gravitationally hooked to the Sun ... one star. This system contains
7 other other significant planets, more than 100 of their moons, and huge
numbers of comets, asteroids, dwarf planets, and countless bodies in a
giant shell that are so small and so far away that we can only see a few
of them so far. Every one of these items orbits the sun. The ones that
are farthest out may take thousands of years to complete one orbit.
That's the 'kingdom' of ONE star ... the sun.
-- It's very likely that there are similar gatherings of different-size objects
around MOST stars ... maybe ALL stars. Those objects are tremendously
difficult for us to see. We're just beginning to be able to see the most massive
planets that go with other stars, and already, something like a thousand of them
have been discovered. We know that they're there, but we can't see things like
their actual size or surface markings yet.
-- Stars are clumped in gatherings of several billion, called 'galaxies'.
Our sun is one of an estimated 300 to 400 billion stars in one galaxy,
which we call the "Milky Way Galaxy".
-- Astronomers estimate that there are billions of other galaxies.
So there are billions of billions of other stars, and most of them may
have several planets.
That's an awful lot of OTHER physical systems out there, that contain
other planets and moons.
Having trouble wrapping your mind around all of that ? Don't worry,
you're not the only one. It's easy for us to talk about it, but impossible
for our minds to actually understand it. It's just too big.