investigate how Europeans perceive the consequences of massive migration flows in their country and their everyday life. In general, respondents consider the immigration of people outside Europe dangerous for their personal security, as well as a threat for the economy and the culture of their country. More precisely, in the 28 countries sampled, 62% of respondents think that the massive influx of immigrants in their country will increase the threat of terrorism and the crime rates. At the same time, 57% of Europeans believe that non-EU immigration harms the cultural homogeneity of their own country. This result is in line with the data shown by the REScEU Mass Survey conducted in 2016 in six EU member states (France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain, Sweden, and United Kingdom). Finally, European citizens also worry about the negative economic impact brought by immigration. Almost three respondents out of four (73%) believe that handling immigration poses a huge financial burden for receiving countries. Another 61% of them think that the mass influx of immigrants from outside of the continent set back the EU’s economy.
Ice caps and glaciers is your answer.
Answer:
b. a strike-slip fault that forms the boundary between tectonic plates
Explanation:
Firstly, a <u>strike-slip fault </u>is simply an horizontal motion parallel to the strike of the faults surface.
A transform faults usually exist between tectonic plates boundaries and usually their is a strike-slip movement along the faults. The most notable transform faults is the San Andrea faults in California.
Generally, transforms faults comes from the fact that the displacement along the faults abruptly ends or transform into another kind of displacement.