Answer- When a plate crashes into one another, the soil and dust can shoot up into the sky.
The correct answer is 30 September. This means Audrey needs to complete her annual 15 hours of Continuing Education requirement by 30 September in Aalabama.
According to Alabama Real Estate Commission an active license must be renewed every two years and must have completed a minimum of fifteen (15) clock hours of continuing education as specified by the Commission. On the last day of every even year, September 30, these hours must be finished. The following constitutes the fifteen-hour continuing education course requirement:
(a) Three (3) hours of the Risk Management course that has been approved by the Commission.
(b) Twelve (12) clock hours of authorized coursework by the Commission.
Learn more about licensing in Alabama here:
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I believe the answer is: brain changes that greatly improve dexterity
As we are conditioning ourselves to do something with a certain part of our body, our brain would eventually improve and adjust itself to make us able to do that thing better, even on automatic function. The same thing happen to soccer youths who are continuously trained to use both of their leg to make a maneuver ever since they're little.
The answer is <span>C. Missouri was admitted as a slave state and Maine as a free state.
It said that any sate below 35 parallel was a salve sate and all above were free. </span>
A water scarcity report issued recently as a collaboration of several U.S. intelligence agencies predicts that the likelihood of conflict over water will increase in the coming decades. The report argues that the Middle East, as perhaps the most water impoverished region of the world, will be particularly susceptible to so-called “water wars.”
The strain on the global water supply is the result of a number of factors. First, most of the Earth’s water is simply unavailable for consumption, sanitation, or agricultural purposes because 97% of it is salt water. Of the remaining 3%, only 1% is available for direct human use. Moreover, in some areas of the world, the available freshwater supply is being depleted faster than it is being replenished. Saudi Arabia, for example, gets 70% of its water from 21 aquifers where water is being extracted faster than nature can restore the supply. In the case of Yemen, the state’s current water demand exceeds its renewable water resources by 900 million cubic meters per year.
As the world’s population continues to grow, the demand for water will increase correspondingly. The high population growth rates, hovering around 2% in the region compared to the world average of 1.1%, and paucity of arable land in the Middle East will make water shortages in the region particularly acute. The United Nations predicts that by 2025, 30 countries will be water scarce, out of which 18 will be in the Middle East and North Africa