Oceanic Crust
Continental Crust
Oceanic crust is denser than continental, this is why continents are at higher elevation than oceans.
1. The Andes runs through the seven countries of <span>Venezuela, Ecuador, Colombia, Bolivia, Peru, Argentina and Chile.
2. Broad-leaf Evergreen forest is the most common type of vegetation in Latin America. Brazil has the most land with this type of vegetation.
3. Mexico City is the most populate city north of the equator. The three most populous cities south of the equator are </span><span>Buenos Aires, São Paulo, and Rio de Janeiro.
4. Oil is the most abundant resource in Latin America. Venezuela and Mexico have the most oil in Latin America.
5. This feature found here is </span><span>the Isthmus of Panama. It is in the country of Panama.
6. These three are </span><span>Suriname, the French Guiana, and Guyana.
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The correct answer is South America.
Explanation
The graph shows the change in forest cover across various regions such as Eastern and Southern Africa, Northern Africa, Western and Central Africa, East Asia, South and Southeast Asia, Western and Central Asia, Europe, Caribbean, Central America, North America, Oceania and South America of the world between 1990 and 2010 (divided into four groups 1990, 2000, 2005 and 2010). According to the graph the region with less change in forest cover is North America because through those years, there were close to 700.000 Ha; the region with the most increase of forest cover is East Asia because in 1990 there were close to 200.000 Ha and in 2010 there were close to 270.000 Ha, and the region with the most decrease of forest cover is South America because in 1990 there were close to 930.000 Ha and in 2010 there were close to 850.000 Ha. According to the above, the correct answer is South America.
Answer:
A drainage divide is a ridge that separates one watershed from another
Explanation:
A drainage divide is the natural feature that is dividing the watersheds, or rather it is a ridge of a mountain or hill that is dividing the waters. The drainage divides determine where the water will go, on which side, in which streams and rivers. Some of them are larger, some are smaller, but they all do the same job. Where the waters from a certain watershed will end up though depends on the topography of the terrain, which can make them the waters move in any direction, or better said from higher to lower places. This occasionally gives weird paths of the waters from some watershed, as the watershed can be very close to a big body of water, but the topography moves it away from it, and it ends up in a body of water hundreds or even thousands km away.