Answer:
-India, Iran, Afghanistan, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, the Marquesas, as well as parts of Australia use half-hour deviations from standard time, and some nations, such as Nepal, and some provinces, such as the Chatham Islands of New Zealand, use quarter-hour deviations.
-This has largely to do with the politics in each of those places. For example, in New Delhi, India, they found themselves halfway between two meridians, and therefore decided to be 30 minutes between each, as opposed to adopting one time or the other
Meridians - a circle of constant longitude passing through a given place on the earth's surface and the terrestrial poles.
332,010
It’s an even number so it’s divisible and ends with 0.
I need the pints so don’t drink
Answer:
This is my original response
Explanation:
I would use non-probability sampling to find a large enough population to accurately and effectively represent a range of age, occupation, and anxiety levels among both genders. The hypothesis would be constructed around predicting the effectiveness or lack thereof of the new drug among a certain population. The operational definition of anxiety could be in terms of a test score or by plotting the activation of the sympathetic nervous system. The independent variable would be the administration of a placebo or the actual test drug. The dependent variable would be the test scores or how the sympathetic nervous system is impacted and changes in activation. The experimental group and control group would ideally be split evenly between the range of age, occupation, and anxiety levels among both genders from the sampling population. The experimental group would get the real test drug and the control group would get the placebo.
Answer:
it emits more carbon than it absorbs.
Explanation:
A carbon sink is growing in size and storing more carbon compared to a carbon source which is shrinking in size and releasing more carbon. Carbon sources include emissions from burning fossil fuels, forest fires, and respiration. Carbon sinks include the oceans, plants, and soil.