Answer :About 80% of earthquakes occur where plates are pushed together, called convergent boundaries. Another form of convergent boundary is a collision where two continental plates meet head-on.
Answer:
western coastal
Explanation:
The Eastern Mediterranean is mostly arid and semi-arid. The precipitation levels are very low in general, with only small areas of this part of the region receiving sufficient amounts of rainfall. The majority of the precipitation is along the western coastal part of the Eastern Mediterranean, mostly the coastal parts of Lebanon, Syria, and in the past few decades Israel as well. The reason for this is that in this part of the region there are mountains, so the warm, wet air masses accumulate and there's sufficient amounts of precipitations. Behind the mountains though it it mostly desert and very dry. Israel naturally doesn't have precipitation in this manner, but by using the technology, this country started to produce artificial conditions for precipitation, increasing the precipitation significantly, turning from desert, to one of the most prosperous agricultural countries in the region.
The earth's axis points to the same spot in the sky as the earth orbits the sun. This relationship can be divided into four points of interest.
<span>1) When the earth's north pole is pointing at its maximum amount away from the sun. That is the winter solstice in the northern hemisphere. </span>
<span>2) Six months later, the north pole is now tilted most *toward* the sun. This is the NH summer solstice. </span>
<span>3,4) The points halfway between those are where the polar axis is "sideways" to the sun. The sun is on a direct line from the center of the earth through the equator. These are the two equinoxes. </span>
<span>To illustrate this, take a globe and move it in a circle around some central point, with the angle of the polar tilt always pointed in the same direction. </span>
Magnitude
is the energy released by an earthquake.
Using a Richter Scale. (often)