Fossils can tell you that Pangea time really happened. Let’s say you find a fossil in North America for something normally found in Africa or a fossil in Europe for something that would otherwise be in South America. Wouldn’t that explain continental drift happened (the continents split)? It most certainly does.
Answer:
<em>Do you think they’ll spread out, cluster together, or move in a combination of the two? </em>
I think they will move in a combination of two. Look at Cali. It's splitting! But who is to say that it will not cluster to another land as it spreads out. There's not enough space on earth for every piece of land
<em>What types of landforms do you anticipate forming as a result?</em>
When they cluster together, mountains are formed. If they spread out, faults form.
<em>What effect, if any, do you anticipate this movement will have on life on Earth? </em>
Invasive species.
Stone mountain is located in georgia and is naturally occuring quartz monzonite rock
<u>Answer:</u>
<u>An atmospheric cycle </u>is not a major biogeochemical cycle.
<u>Explanation:</u>
The flow of air from the high-pressure area to the low-pressure area is called the atmosphere cycle. Low-pressure areas are created by the upliftment of the heated air. Higher and colder atmosphere will fall eventually by creating a high-pressure area.
Monsoon patterns are the result of these atmosphere cycles. The weather in high-pressure areas is stable with clear skies compared to low-pressure areas where weather is highly unstable with clouds (formed from vapour due to the higher temperature).
The city called Naples I’m pretty sure