(Ignore this it says it has to be 20 characters long) The answer is A
The answer is Triton, i just finished the test.
Cliff collapse can cause land with houses, schools or places of work to be severely damaged or destroyed, this can result in people having to relocate which can cause express and sentimental distress (the impact of this is often greater on the elderly or families). Businesses that have been damaged / destroyed may have to close or make some people redundant if the economic impact on them was high; this has a large economic affect on the individual and any people dependent on them (e.g. Children / elderly parents) but this will also affect the entire community as there will be drops in the local economy which creates a multiplier affect.
Often coastal areas are tourism honeypot sites, if the cliff collapse causes lots of the sites tourists are interested in to be destroyed (e.g tourism shops, caravan sites) then lots of people employed in tourism may be may redundant, this has a wider affect than you may think (e.g. businesses that support this tourism such as companies that make scuba diving kit, dairies which provide milk for I've creams etc).
A wind shift from the south or southwest to the northwest is commonly associated with the passage of cold front.
Regions where cold air masses are replaced by warm air masses are called cold fronts. Cold fronts generally move from the northwest to the southeast. A cold front leaves the air much colder and drier than the air that preceded it.
Temperatures might drop more than 15 degrees in the first hour after a cold front sweeps through. A solid blue line is used to represent a cold front on coloured weather maps. A cold front often has a considerable temperature difference from one side to the other.
Know more about cold front here
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Answer:
Short answer 24
Explanation:
The world is divided into 24 time zones. The course of one day is broken down to the seconds and calculated to define the correct time of a particular place. However, it is not that easy. The 24 time zones, created in accordance to each hour of the day, are theoretically drawn vertically like longitudes over the globe.