Answer:
Yes.
Explanation:
Yes, I agree with the government's family planning program because the program efficiently control the country's growing population.
Yes, I think our government's programs for solve the problem caused by population growth. If there is no population no need for the solution for the problem. Unemployment, depletion of resources at faster rate and more food is needed for the population are the problems caused by population growth in a country. Burden on the economy of the country occurs due to population growth that hinder the development of countries. Yes, population growth is also be an instrument of development which provides labour force to the country.
Answer:
D.) Cold treeless lands
Explanation:
Canada is the second largest country in the world. It occupies slightly less than half of North America. The country is located on a high latitude though, so its climate conditions are not the best, as the country in general is very cold.
The northern 40% of the country though are even colder than the rest of the country. This part of Canada falls into the tundra biome. It is area where the winter dominates for most of the year. The summer is not summer in the real sense of the world, as it is very short and relatively cold as well. The temperatures in this part of Canada are very low. The landscape is covered with ice and snow for most of the year, and there are strong, cold, dry winds.
Because the climate conditions are like this, this part of the country doesn't have trees. Instead, in the short ''summer'', the plants that dominate are very small ones that don't require much to survive. The plants that manage to survive in these conditions are mostly mosses, lichens, dwarf shrubs, and algae.
One of the large, continuous areas of the Earth into which the land surface is divided. Hope this helps :)
Islam
See for yourself:
In pre-Islamic and early Islamic times, Central Asia was predominantly Iranian,[8][9] populated by Eastern Iranian-speaking Bactrians, Sogdians, Chorasmians and the semi-nomadic Scythians and Parthians.
Source:
Encyclopædia Iranica, "CENTRAL ASIA: The Islamic period up to the Mongols", C. Edmund Bosworth