Answer: Argentina
Explanation: Mas expressao "Cone Sul" se geralmente aplica aos países como Argentina, Chile, Uruguay
The Central American Vegetation/Land Cover Classification and Conservation Status consists of GIS coverages of vegetation classes (forests, woodlands, savannas, shrubs, grasslands, wetlands, rocks, sand, soils, inland waters, parks and reserves) for Central America, derived from 1-kilometer resolution Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) imagery. This data set is produced by Proyecto Ambiental Regional de Centroamerica/Central America Protected Areas Systems (PROARCA/CAPAS), a conservation partnership of the Central American Commission on Environment and Development (CCAD), U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), International Resources Group, Ltd. (IRG), The Nature Conservancy (TNC), Winrock International (WI), and is distributed by the Columbia University Center for International Earth Science Information Network (CIESIN).
Answer:
El río que separa el macizo de Brasilia y el macizo Patagónico se llama río Colorado.
Explanation:
El macizo de Brasilia comprende el actual Brasil y el macizo Patagónico, buena parte de la actual Argentina. El macizo de Brasilia cubre buena parte del centro, todo el este, noreste, centro-norte, centro-sur y sureste de América del Sur, mientras que el macizo cubre todo el sur de Argentina. El río que separa ambos macizos se llama el río Colorado, el cual atraviesa las provincias de Mendoza, Neuquén, Río Negro, La Pampa y Buenos Aires antes de desembocar en el Océano Atlántico.
Answer:
1. Applying <u>the principle of original horizontality</u> -indicates that layers were repositioned from a flat-lying orientation.
2. Magma intrudes into layers of sedimentary rock and displaces them. We can deduce that the intruded magma that crystallizes is younger than the surrounding sedimentary layers by applying <u>the principle of crosscutting relationships</u>.
3. While visiting the Grand Canyon, you are amazed by the depth of layers of sedimentary rock before you, <u>the law of superposition</u>-- is evident here where progressively younger layers have formed over time and are stacked upon each other.
4. A fault cuts through layers of limestone, sandstone, and conglomerate. The surrounding layers must be <u>older</u> than the fault.
5. A mass of granite has inclusions of surrounding sandstone. The sandstone and surrounding layers show evidence of uplift over time. The granite must be <u>younger</u> than the sand deposits.