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Damm [24]
2 years ago
15

+ 12 POINTS PLZZ HELLLP

Geography
1 answer:
WARRIOR [948]2 years ago
6 0

The correct answer is D. Assigning representatives to control different provinces.

Explanation

Chandragupta Maurya was a Maurya leader who managed to unify much of the territory of the Indian subcontinent. During his mandate, he defeated several Greek armies motivated by the conquest of new territories in Asia. In addition, he meant an improvement in economic activities, internal and external trade, and agriculture. In the administrative aspect, he stood out for delegating governance responsibilities to representatives who controlled different provinces to provide security to the population because the size of the Empire's territory prevented him from governing from a center of power, so he had to delegate powers to avoid weakness throughout the territory. Therefore, the correct answer is D. Assigning representatives to control different provinces.

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Find the equation of a line that is parallel to line g that contains (P, Q).
Naddik [55]

Answer:

x - y = P - Q

Explanation:

The equation of the line that is parallel to line g, will have the same slope as line g.

Find the slope of line g using two points on the line, (-3, 2) and (0, 5):

slope (m) = \frac{y_2 - y_1}{x_2 - x_1} = \frac{5 - 2}{0 - (-3)} = \frac{3}{3} = 1

m = 1

Point-slope equation takes the form, y - b = m(x - a), where,

(a, b) is a point the line passes through

m = slope of the line

If the line parallel to g passes through (P, Q), then the equation can be written as follows:

Substitute (a, b) = (P, Q), and m = 1 into y - b = m(x - a).

Thus:

y - Q = 1(x - P)

y - Q = x - P

Rewrite

P - Q = x - y

x - y = P - Q

6 0
3 years ago
Which of these are abrahamic faiths check all that apply A.judaism B.roman Catholicism C.islam D.buddhism​
Stels [109]
I think that A,B and C is the answer
3 0
3 years ago
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What are two ways in which bays are thought to be formed
koban [17]

Answer: Bays are thought to be formed by plate tectonic activity and erosion of coastline.

Explanation:

A body of water irregularly surrounded by land is known as a bay. And it is quite different from a gulf.

A bay is formed this way:

• when there is an erosion of the coastline into a large body of water. E.g Guanabara Bay.

• in pre-historic era, during active plate tectonic activity where continents drifts together and as they rift apart, there is the fomation of many large bays. E.g Bengal Bay.

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Answer:

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Explanation:

7 0
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How are tsunamis formed?
geniusboy [140]

Answer: Most waves form due to winds or tides, but tsunamis have a different cause altogether. A tsunami is most often formed by an earthquake, but it can also be formed by an underwater landslide, volcano eruption or even meteorite.

The process is fairly complex, so let’s start digging into it.

What are tsunamis and how they form

Most waves form due to winds or tides, but tsunamis have a different cause altogether.

Most waves form due to winds or tides, but tsunamis have a different cause altogether. A tsunami is most often formed by an earthquake, but it can also be formed by an underwater landslide, volcano eruption or even meteorite.

The process is fairly complex, so let’s start digging into it.

What is a tsunami

“Tsunami” is a Japanese word meaning “harbor wave,” but that doesn’t say much about their nature, and tsunamis are not nearly restricted to harbors. A more accurate term would be “seismic sea waves,” and it would describe them more accurately. However, tsunami has stuck and it’s what everyone uses today. People sometimes refer to them as “tidal waves,” but that term is technically incorrect and should be avoided in this context.

Tsunamis are indeed waves, but unlike wind waves, they have a much larger wavelength. Think a bit about waves — in the context of physics, not in the context of sea waves. A defining characteristic of every wave is its wavelength. Wind waves have short wavelengths which can be clearly seen on any shoreline. They come in every few seconds, with a few meters in between — sometimes, even less. But a tsunami has a huge wavelength, oftentimes longer than a hundred kilometers and this is why they are so dangerous (more on that a bit later). Tsunamis are almost always not singular waves, but come in as train waves.

HOW TSUNAMIS FORM BELOW.

How tsunamis form – earthquakes

The vast majority of tsunamis form due to earthquakes — specifically tectonic tsunamis. As an earthquake happens, the ground beneath the water is moved up and/or down abruptly and as this movement happens, a mass of water is displaced and starts moving in all directions. This marks the start of a tsunami.

The displaced water starts to move as a wave. At this point, it has a very low amplitude as it is located in deep water (earthquakes on the coastline rarely cause tsunamis). Tsunamis in open water are usually shorter than 0.3 meters (12 inches).

Hope this helps!!! Good luck!!! ;)

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