Answer:
D
Explanation:
Wind can be described by its direction and speed. Wind direction is described using the direction from which it is blowing. Westerly winds move from west to east, while easterly winds move from east to west. Wind speed can be described using measurements like miles per hour or levels on a scale called the Beaufort scale. The Beaufort scale divides wind speeds into categories and uses specific words for different strengths of wind. A “breeze” is a light wind, while a “gale” is stronger. On the Beaufort Scale, the strongest breeze is 31 miles per hour; any wind over 32 miles per hour is considered a gale.
Answer: 120 - 240 kilometers per hour
Explanation:
Jet streams are narrow, fast flowing, air currents that are in the atmospheres of certain planets, which includes the Earth. Jet streams are air currents that are placed very high above the Earth and form where there are big differences in temperature in the atmosphere.
The jet stream has winds that blow up to 120 - 240 kilometers per hour which can greatly influence the impact of weather patterns over a continent.
Answer:
Yali´s question: "Why you white man have so much cargo and we New Guineans have so little?"
Explanation:
This question from Yali, a Papua New Guinean political leader, led Diamond to develop his research published as Guns, Germs, and Steel (1997).
The question refers to the word cargo as New Guineans use it, meaning the goods brought by Westerners, which were considered as proof of the white man’s strength.
Yali’s question is actually about the roots of inequality.