Pacific and north american
C: the italian peninsula
see this map:
True. If you are in a trench, you are literally sitting in a hole in the dirt for hours on end; sometimes keeping watch, sometimes in the heat of battle. If you get injured, there are tons of diseases in the dirt and from humans just sitting in that hole for large amounts of time, usually without showering for days or weeks (depending on where you are and the resources available). Injury, you could get shot in the shoulder while firing, or someone could throw an active grenade into the trench and, well, it wouldn't end well. Mud-- you're sitting in a hole, in the dirt. If it rains, you are now sitting in a wet hole in the dirt, and dedication to your country--or flying bullets--is keeping you there.
Answer:
raising magma
Explanation:
The volcanoes are natural features that are a result of the geologic processes. They form alongside all types of plate boundaries, though they are most commonly found along the subduction zones. Some of the volcanoes actually form in the middle of the tectonic plates, and they are a result of the hot spots. Whichever the way it is, all volcanoes have one common characteristic, the rising magma. The raising magma is actually what makes up the shape of the volcanoes. The magma can come in several different ways, depending on its composition, which in turn results in a particular type of eruption. The magma that cools off, be it on the surface in the form of lava flows, or deeper into the ground, creates igneous rocks, or practically new crust.
Ocean currents act much like a conveyor belts, transporting warm water and precipitation from the equator toward the poles and cold water from the poles back to the tropics. Thus, currents regulate global climate, helping to counteract the uneven distribution of solar radiation reaching Earth's surface.