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Zina [86]
3 years ago
10

1. How is culture characterized and described?

Geography
1 answer:
rosijanka [135]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

1. How is culture characterized and described?

Culture is Characterized and described by the religious types of food, languages, norms, clothing, art, music, or anything similar to those things. Cultures provide essential social and economic benefits. It makes a difference in how we view ourselves and others. It affects our values—what we consider right and wrong. This is how the society we live in influences our choices. But our choices can also influence others and ultimately help shape our society. Some examples of culture are that in India, people greet each other with namaste, while in the U.S. people shake hands with each other. In Mexico, some traditional dishes you would find are enchiladas, burritos, tacos, tortillas, and tamales. Although, if you go to the middle east, in Jordan for example, you will most likely find kebabs, falafels, hummus, and shawarma. These are just some examples of different cultures around the world.

2. How are ideas about place and identity defined by culture groups?

Place identity was initially introduced by Proshansky (1978), who defined place identity as “those dimensions of self that define the individual’s personal identity in relation to the physical environment by means of a complex pattern of conscious and unconscious ideas, feelings, values, goals, preferences, skills, and behavioral tendencies relevant to a specific environment”. Without the ideas of place and identity, we wouldn’t have cultural groups. Culture is Characterized and described by the religious types of food, languages, norms, clothing, art, music, or anything similar to those things.  We need ideas, feelings, values, goals, preferences, skills, and behavioral tendencies to have cultures.

3. How do culture traits move and develop through time and space across different scales?

Culture traits move and develop through time and space across different scales by spreading/sharing beliefs and starting traditions. If people pass something down from family to family, friends, to friends, it becomes a norm tradition. For example, it’s a tradition in America to drink eggnog or hot chocolate during Christmas. There is no specific reason as to why people do it, it’s just a tradition being used by families. Another example of traditions is eating a turkey during thanksgiving, eating with hands in India, and bullfighting in Mexico.

4. Why does the concept of region help us understand the distribution of culture?

Culture regions can be found in urban, suburban, or rural settings. these are urban culture regions whose borders are defined by the locations of specific cultural communities. Culture regions, like cultures themselves, display considerable variety. Different cities around the world have ethnic mixes. culture regions may provide important perspectives on contemporary problems that are rooted in cultural differences

5. How does the interaction of language, religion, ethnicity, and gender cause conflict on different scales?

Cultural interaction may explain the presence and or absence of particular traits in certain areas. The relationships that often exist between cultural components that characterize a given community start here. This demonstrates that cultural components may be interrelated. Few culture traits have the power and importance of religion. Indeed, religion is a key to understanding the way of life of a particular cultural community.

6. How does culture shape the relationships between humans and the environment, in terms of landscapes, values, beliefs, and architecture?

Culture shapes the relationships between humans and the environment, in terms of landscapes, values, beliefs, and architecture. People of all regions and times have left their cultural imprints on Earth, and many of these endure. As a result, the cultural landscape may be a tool for understanding the history and status of a given area, as well as current trends. Finally, in some cultural contexts, the notion of favorable (or unfavorable) locations and sacred directions dictates the placement and orientation of landscape elements. Culture is very influential in our daily lives and how we live it.

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mafiozo [28]

8 - 2x =  - 8x + 14

subtract 8 from both sides leaving

- 2x =  - 8x + 6

combine -2x+-8x =-10x

10x = 6

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Answer: Plants such as tree cones depend on wildfires in order to pass through a regular life cycle.

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Some Tree cones need wildfires to enable them pass through a life cycle because the heat produced melts the substance that covers the pines thereby enabling the pines to open up and spread their seeds.

Wildfires are therefore essential to the continued survival of trees such as these because without wildfires, these trees might never go through the entirety of their life cycle by dispersing seeds and if this continues it would spell doom for the survival of the species.

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3 years ago
About how many miles apart are the deposits of tin and the Amazon River basin
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Answer:

i think about 50

Explanation:

Amaze (or bore) your friends and colleagues with some Amazon trivia. Who knows, it might even win you big bucks someday on a game show! The Amazon IS the world's greatest river. The Nile of Africa may be slightly longer, depending on how you measure each river, but for many other reasons the Amazon River is the undisputed title holder - the greatest river on the planet, in the solar system, and perhaps even in the Milky Way galaxy (at least no-one from planets orbiting Betelgeuse or Antares has yet provided convincing evidence that they have a bigger river on their planet!). Read on!

If size is important to you... The average discharge of water into the Atlantic Ocean by the Amazon is approximately 175,000 m3 per second, or between 1/5th and 1/6th of the total discharge into the oceans of all of the world's rivers! This discharge is 4-5 times that of the Congo River (the second largest in ocean discharge), and 10 times that of the Mississippi. The Rio Negro, a tributary of the Amazon, is the second largest river in the world in terms of water flow, and is 100 meters (over 300 feet) deep and 14 kilometers (~9 miles) wide near its mouth at Manaus, Brazil.

Raindrops keep falling on my head! Average rainfall across the whole Amazon basin is approximately 2300 mm (or ~7.5') annually. In some areas of the northwest portion of the Amazon basin, yearly rainfall can exceed 6000 mm (almost 20')!

Where does all that water go? The water discharged into the Atlantic Ocean is actually only about 1/3rd of the water that falls in the Amazon basin as rain. Where does the other 2/3rds go? Up to half of the rainfall in some areas may never reach the ground, being intercepted by the forest and re-evaporated into the atmosphere. Additional evaporation occurs from ground and river surfaces, or is released into the atmosphere by transpiration from plant leaves. All of this moisture re-enters the water cycling system of the Amazon, and a given molecule of water may be "re-cycled" many times between the time that it leaves the surface of the Atlantic Ocean and is carried by the prevailing westerly winds into the Amazon basin, to the time that it is carried back to the ocean by the Amazon River. The Andes Mountains that border the west side of the Amazon help to ensure that most of the moisture stays in the system - very little is carried by the prevailing winds over the Andes to the Pacific Ocean.

A long and winding river road. The total length of the Amazon River from its source springs in the Andes (taking the Ucayali River as the continuation of the main river into the Andes), is estimated at 6518 km ( ~4075 miles) (not including all river bends, and measuring the short distance around Marajó Island in the mouth of the Amazon). This is exceeded only by the Nile River (including the Kagera River) of Africa with a total length of 6671 km (4170 miles). If you measure the long-way around Marajo Island, however, the Amazon is slightly longer than the Nile! The Amazon headwaters are located high in the Andes at an elevation of about 5,200 meters (17,000 feet), and only 190 kilometers (120 miles) from the Pacific Ocean.

Like mother, like daughters.... Two of the tributaries of the Amazon, the Juruá and the Madeira Rivers, are both over 3,300 km (2,060 miles) long. About 1,100 other sizeable tributaries empty into the Amazon River.

Talk about a big mouth! The mouth of the Amazon is over 320 km wide (approximately 200 miles), and contains the worlds largest freshwater island, Marajó Island, with an area of 48,000 km2 (about the size of Switzerland).

Momma was not a Rolling Stone! After leaving the Andes, the elevational gradient of the Amazon is very low. Iquitos, Peru is some 3,600 km (2,250 miles) from the Atlantic, yet the river-level at low-water season is only about 100 m (a bit more than 300') above sea-level, and the slope is around 2 cm (less than one inch) vertical change per kilometer. In the lower Amazon, at the mouth of Rio Negro and still 1,500 km from the Atlantic, the river-level at low-water season is only 15 m (~47') above sea-level, and the slope is about 1 cm per kilometer. You won't find any white-water rapids along the main channel of the Amazon, though the sheer weight of the mass of water moves it along at a surprising speed.

NEWS FLASH!! Rumpelstiltskin Drowns in Slow Flood. The Amazon is not a good place to fall into a long deep sleep on the river bank! Seasonal water levels can vary up to 20 meters (65 feet) in the middle Amazon region. Towards the mouth of the Amazon, the yearly change becomes less and less, but even near the mouth of the Amazon (at the Rio Xingu), it is still 4 meters (12 feet). In the Iquitos region of Peru, the annual change in river levels is about 15 meters (~50 as high as 3 meters (9.8 feet) per second.

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Use the earthquake distribution map and what you know about boundaries to answer the question. a map showing the tectonic plates
Galina-37 [17]

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<h3>What is an oceanic-oceanic convergence?</h3>

This refers to when two oceanic plates collide with each other which leads to the heavier plate sinking.

The Philippine plate and the Pacific plates are both oceanic plate so if they converged, this would be an oceanic-oceanic convergence.

Find out more on oceanic convergence at brainly.com/question/21677223.

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