I believet the answer would be D. Ellesmere Island
:)
A region's vegetation is LEAST likely to affect the preservation of folk culture.
That is because the presence of vegetation in a given land, while it is featured in the local people's culture (represented in their pictorial arts or in their cuisine, for example), does not necessarily endanger the <u>preservation</u> of the culture as a whole.
However, if the economy and/or the agriculture are reliant on this type of vegetation, a change in the vegetation can have direct consequences on these activities. Similarly, if a plant is important in the people's diet, they are more likely to gather around the areas where the plant grows (distribution of population). And if the plant is less available, the population may stop thriving, reproduce less, and maybe emigrate (size of population).
The closer you get to the city the higher buildings get such as apartment buildings due to price of land
It’s a current from Florida that goes east across the ocean to Europe. The current is warm and it effects north and northwestern Europe “warming it up”. Europe has a warmer climate because of the stream(when you compare it to other countries with a similar latitude.
World maps do have changed during the centuries because we grew in knowledge and technology, but the maps have also been shaped by differences in culture, religion, experience, and geography and also because of different natural disaster