<span>The choices can be found elsewhere and as follows:
</span>a.on the shoreward side of coastal mountain ranges
b.on the inward side of coastal mountain ranges
c.in the middle of flat plains
d.<span>along continental coastlines
</span><span>
I think the correct answer is option B. Desert climate associated with a rain shadow is found </span>on the inward side of coastal mountain ranges. Hope this answers the question.
The lunar eclipse happens when the Moon goes through the Earth's shadow. Earth dependably has a shadow, which is made by the Sun. On those uncommon events when the Moon, Earth and the Sun are altogether arranged perfectly, the Moon goes through this shadow.This would happen each full moon if the Moon circled around the Earth in an indistinguishable plane from the Earth circles around the Sun.
As my memory serves me well, innovations like the production of gunpowder, tea, and silk are usually attributed to D. China
The lithosphere is the outermost sphere of the solid Earth, consisting of the crust and the upper part of the mantle. The lithosphere is largely important because it is the area that the biosphere (the living things on earth) inhabit and live upon.
If it weren't for the tectonic plates of the lithosphere there would be no change on Earth. Tectonic plates shift due to convection currents lower down in the mantle, and this can cause the formation of mountains, the eruption of volcanoes, and earthquakes. While this can be devastating in the short-run, long term benefits are the formation of new plant life, the creation of new habitats and encouraging adaptation.
It is also the source of almost all of our resources, and is rich in elements like iron, aluminium, calcium, copper and magnesium, which humans have used for tools and machinery for millennia.
When the biosphere interacts with the lithosphere, organic compounds can become buried in the crust, and dug up as oil, coal or natural gas that we can use for fuels.
In combination with the atmosphere and hydrosphere (water), it provides a stable source of nutrients for botanical life, which produce glucose that higher organisms use for sustenance.