<span>In the United States, Insha’ALLAH, 1st Ramadan 2018 began on May 16. The last day of the Ramadan month, Ramadan Mubarak 1439 is predicted to be on June 14 when there will be greater visibility of Shawwal moon by telescope on the evening of June 14.</span>
The relative risk of a vehicle crash at a BAC of 0.10 percent than a BAC of 0.00 is 5 times higher for the driver will have a difficulty staying in line and having trouble stepping on the brake when needed.
Answer:
Explanation:
B. The title of a map can identify the location it shows.
When presenting a map, it is always important to put the location where the mapping process covers. This is why one can easily infer the locational attribute on a map from the title given to a map. For example, on a geologic map, the title can be "Geological field mapping of BoreCounty and environs", from the title, we can say the location of the mapping was in BoreCounty.
C. A legend typically explains the area a map shows.
Legends or keys are used to make sense of a map. The legend can be drawn for different map features. A user can easily get a succint interpretation of the map by looking through the legend and applying the symbols and codes of the legend to the map piece. Therefore, legends in most part explains the map area.
D. Colors and symbols are named in the map’s key.
This is true. For any color or symbol used on the map, the key presents and names them. Rivers, rail tracks, roads amongst others appears on a map and they are duly and properly named.
Answer:
Before mountain building occurred, the area was underwater.
Explanation:
Through excavation, fossils that are of marine animals are often found high on mountain ranges. This seems weird from today's perspective, as marine animals can only be found in ocean waters, and there is no way they can travel on land and upon the mountains. Earth has changed a lot throughout history though, so such occurances are actually not that weird.
The mountains in Pennsylvania are such a place, with an abundance of marine fossils. When we look at the geological past of what is now Pennsylvania we can easily see why this is the case. The whole area was actually underwater for millions of years. This was the case before mountain building occurred here when part of the ocean floor raised high above the surface of the water and created land. As the crust was going up, the fossils on it went up as well.
I think the answer is B: sediments melt deep beneath the Earth's surface.