The correct answer is - days or years before the major earthquake.
The foreshocks always come before the major earthquake. They can appear only a single day before it, weeks, months, or even years. It is a nice indicator that something bigger is coming, so if people are wary enough they can avoid the devastating effects of the major seismic activity afterwards.
For example, we can take the foreshocks and the major earthquake in Ohrid, Republic of Macedonia, in the summer of 2016, where the foreshocks started about two months earlier, and they were present every day for those two months, slightly increasing in intensity, until the major earthquake of 6.9 magnitude according to the Richter scale came.
Answer: resposta C
Explanation: é a opção que mais condiz com a continuação do texto
Answer:
D. Factories and their corresponding jobs were located in cities and created economic opportunities for migrants
Explanation:
The water cycle transports a plethera of microorganisms, and many of them are harmful for human beings. These include bacteria, protozoa, viruses, and lavae of high-ordered parasytes. Some of the aforementioned are Giardia, Cyptospordium, Shigella, E. coli, hepatitis A virus, and enterovirus.
Waters can also carry chemical wastes such as pesticides, and heavy metals dissolved in them. It is common to hear about acid rain as a result of pollution, and it originates as a result of mixing sulphur dioxide and nitrogen oxide with water molecules in the atmosphere.
There are several technological improvements over the past 100 years that have made the availability of clean water to communities a lot easier, and not only depend on boiling water. Filtration is the most common practice, it traps most unwanted particles and microorganisms, but it should be accompanied with chemical disinfection, which uses halogens to oxidize essential celluar structures and enzymes. In the present, chemical disinfection can even be achieved with adding a pill to a specific volume of water.
I think B is the correct answer sorry if I’m wrong