Young
He died when he was 18.. I think
Oceans change the land along the shore, forming tall cliffs and jagged coastlines. "The abrasive nature of seawater causes the rocks to erode over a period of time", the statement explains the type of weathering involved in this process
<u>Explanation:
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The abrasive nature of the sea water of the ocean causes erosion in the rocks which are along the shore. And, this occurs for a period of time causes the formation of the tall cliffs sometimes or to the jagged coastline the other time.
The duration of erosion decides the fate of the cliff or coastline. Erosion of rocks are highly evident in ocean shore line due to the effect of salinity of the sea water. The rocks gets eroded firstly to form jagged coastline which on long exposed erosion forms cliff.
The best bibliogaphic entry would probably be: Smythe, Clark. <em>Unsinkable: Folly on the Titanic</em> Little, Brown: New York, 1976.
That is because it seems to be a book about the Titanic itself, whereas the other ones have to do with:
- topics which are less directly related to the subject-matter (the first entry is about maritime laws and the third one is about the animal and plant populations of the lands near the North Pole),
- personal, relative accounts of the events (like the fourth entry, which is an autobiography of a survivor and therefore describes the wreck through the character's own perspective) as opposed to more factual material.
I looked all over the Internet, and saw that there is another option that you didn't include, and which is actually the correct answer.
Bays best facilitate the building of ports, not these options.
The correct answer is - from solar nebula.
The Earth and the other planets in the Solar System are thought to have formed from solar nebula. This solar nebula is believed to have been a left over from the Sun's formation, being consisted of gas and dust in a disc-shape. The material in this disc-shaped gas and dust started to merge gradually, thus little by little forming bigger and bigger objects, and as the objects were getting bigger they had bigger gravitational pull so more and more material was attracted toward them. Because of the very big gravitational pull of the Sun these objects were not able to wander into the space but were instead kept close to the Sun. Because of the orbiting around the Sun, they all started to take a rounded shape. Some planets as the Earth, Venus, Mars, and Mercury became terrestrial planets, while the likes of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune became gas giants.