Well, cold climates have made the people in those areas, seek heat, water might be scarce bc it may be frozen, wood is very important for fire, hunting animals may be good for food, tools, anddddddd clothes to keep warm of course. And even different means of transportation, different jobs available, no outdoor pools in Iceland lol.
Hotter climates call for clothes to keep you cooler, lots of water for hydration, food to keep all your required nutrients from sweating out, different jobs and transportation
Hotter ecosystems will have animals that like the heat and plants and vegetation that does good in warm climates.
Cooler ecosystems will have animals that like the cold and plants and vegetation that does good in cooler environments.
Hope these helped!
C. Atmosphere - which is the one sphere that means "air" or "gasses". The other ones mean, Biosphere = "living", Lithosphere = "land", and Hydrosphere = "water"
A hurricane is the option that cannot be agents of erosion. The correct option among all the options that are given in the question is the last or the fourth option. Heat, water and pressure can definitely be a cause of erosion. I hope the answer has satisfied you and has also come to your help.
A 'line' is infinite in both directions.
If you mark one point on it and say that's an end, then the rest of it
is still infinite in the other direction, and it's called a 'ray'.
If you mark two points on it and say that those are both ends,
then it has a definite length, and it's called a '<em>line segment</em>'.
Answer:
The discipline of geography encompasses a broad range of approaches to the interrelationship between human activity and the physical features of the earth.
Explanation:
The academic scope of geography is very broad because there are multiple ways that we interact with our physical environments and thus there are many subjects that fall under the disciplinary boundaries of geography. There are two major subfields: Physical geography and human geography. The focus in physical geography is generally more akin to the natural sciences, and human geography is more like the social sciences. These two subfields can have radically different emphasis and research design and this contributes to the difficulties in giving geography a single or uniform meaning.