The elevation on Earth tells how hot or cold is it gonna be. Hence, as the elevation on Earth increases the temperature continues to be colder while as the elevation decreases the temperature continues to get warmer
Explanation:
A major problem with using 15 years of data to predict 100 years of data is that the 15 years could have been setting a trend, then level off.
For example, if the 15 years of data was a graph, and it was going up every year, then what if 20 years into the 100 years it stops going up? Then that means the data was invalid because there wasn't enough to base any trends off of.
You can prevent this from happening by extending the collection time of data and to reduce the amount of time that the data will be used to predict.
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geophysical phenomena is earth and its environment in space for example its when earthquakes, Tsunami, Volcanic activity, cyclone stuff sorta like that
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In this circumstance one should revise the hypothesis and develop a new experiment to test it.An example could be the theory of Agraham Gottloeb Werner that all rocks were precipitated from water including not just sedimentary rocks but also volcanic, plutonic and metamorphic rocks. The more the earth was studied, especially by James Hutton in Scotland, the more it became obvious that granites for example were deposited in a molten state, thus disproving that hypothesis or theory.