Answer:
The mean center of population is the place where an imaginary, flat, weightless, and rigid map of the United States would balance perfectly if all residents were of equal weight. Historically, the movement of the center of population has reflected the expansion of the country, the settling of the frontier, waves of immigration and migration west and south. Since 1790, the center of population has moved steadily westward, angling to the southwest in recent decades.
SOURCE: Geography Division, "Centers of Population Computation for the United States 1950-2010," issued March 2011, available at www.census.gov/geo/www/2010census/centerpop2010/COP2010_documentation.pdf. Consulted for historical reference: Historical Atlas of the United States, National Geographic Society, 1988.
NOTE: The Proclamation Line of 1763 limited British settlement to areas east of the Appalachian Mountains. Alaska and Hawaii were not included in the calculation of the mean center of population until 1950. Puerto Rico was not included in any decade. For more information on the mean center of population, an animated map, and other resources. This graphic is adapted from the "Census Atlas of the United States" published by the Census Bureau in 2007.
Explanation:
Answer:
Landslide is the rapid downhill movement of a mass of rock, debris, or soil
Mudflow is the rapid downhill movement of a mixture of rock soil and water.
Slump is a loosely connected mass of rock and soil
Creep is the slow downhill movement
The appropriate response is Oasis. It is shaped from underground streams or aquifers, for example, an artesian aquifer, where water can achieve the surface normally by weight or by man-made wells. Periodic brief rainstorms give underground water to manage common desert gardens, for example, the Tuat. Substrata of impermeable shake and stone can trap water and hold it in pockets, or on long blaming subsurface edges or volcanic barriers water can gather and permeate to the surface.
Answer:
The Amazon is the world's longest river.
The correct answer is - A. Devonian.
The Devonian is one of the seven periods of the Paleozoic Era. It lasted for 50 million years, from 410 million years ago until 360 million years ago. It is the period in which the first insects evolved, the first seeded plants, as well as the first land vertebrates. This period came after the Silurian period, and was followed by the Mississippian period.