I believe this is asking what continents formed Pangea if that's correct then they're North and South American, Africa, and Europe.
Soil texture is defined as the relative ratios of particle diameter that comprise the soil.
Texture refers to the particle size. The average size of a soil particle is determined by the relative proportions of sand, silt, and clay in the soil. The average size of soil particles geography increases as the quantity of sand in the soil increases, and the resulting soil gets coarser in texture. Conversely, increasing the quantity of clay in the soil reduces the average diameter of the soil particles, resulting in a finer-textured soil. Locate the percentages of clay and silt on the triangular textural diagram's silt and clay side lines, respectively. Then, in the first scenario, draw lines thru these points inwards, perpendicular to the clay side.
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Answer:
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Explanation:
The many, small events move the most material. As rocks move to streams in many places, such as Pennsylvania, the slow and steady motions are more important than the few dramatic events.
That's called a "geostationary" orbit. (Not "geosynchronous".)
It's the situation when the satellite's orbit is
-- perfectly circular,
-- exactly over the equator,
-- and at exactly the right distance from the center of the Earth
(<span>42,164 km or 26,199 mi).</span>
None of these conditions can ever be perfect, and in fact they change over time.
So every real geostationary satellite actually describes a little figure-8 in the sky
once a day. The better its orbit is, the smaller the figure-8.
In order to keep the orbit reasonably correct, it needs a puff from its onboard
thrusters every once in a while.
That's how a TV or weather satellite reaches its "end of life", if it doesn't get
smashed by a meteoroid first: Either its solar panels get too dusty and chipped
by micrometeoroids to generate enough power, or else it runs so low on fuel for
its onboard thrusters that it can't be kept in a useful orbit. At that point, the fuel
that remains is used to intentionally put it into a crazy orbit, where it will dip low
into the atmosphere and burn up.
Why destroy it ? To get it out of the geostationary orbital track, and open up one
of those precious slots for a new, young satellite to take its place. There are only
a few hundred slots available where a satellite can be geostationary. (And a slot
over the Indian Ocean doesn't do TV viewers in the US much good.)
Answer:The region is now seen as being up for grabs as the US begins to withdraw from areas like Syria or Afghanistan – and other states, such as Iran, Turkey, Russia and China are stepping in. This feeds conflicts as each country seeks greater hegemony and wants to take over areas in Syria, Libya or Yemen.
Explanation: