Answer:
<em><u>IF YOU CAN <3 !!!</u></em><em><u> </u></em><em><u>HELP </u></em><em><u> </u></em><em><u>!!!</u></em>
Answer:
Mr.Zulu needs to get a life
Explanation:
Yukon Territory, Northwest Territories, and Nunavut
Answer:
1. I
2. B.
3. F
4. M
5. R
6. H
. . . I don't see a seventh letter or a seventh layer. . .
Explanation:
On the presented image we can see several different layers of rocks that have formed over several different periods of time. It is not layers that have superposition, but instead there are several disturbances that have resulted in displacing some of the layers from their initial position.
The layer I is the oldest, and it is the basis on which the other layer lie.
Layer B is the second oldest and layer F is the third oldest. We can see though that the left side is higher, while the right side is positioned lower. The reason for that is geological activity that has pushed one side upwards, and moved the other side downwards, most probably a fault.
Layer M is the fourth oldest layer, and it is easy to see that this layer lies completely on top of layer F, just that it has been cut through by an intrusion.
Layer R is the top layer, and it is the second youngest. As a layer though it is the youngest, and it is almost uninterrupted and lying on top of all the other layers.
With the letter H we have the youngest geological structure on the image. It represents an intrusion, and it is not a layer. We can tell that it is the youngest because it has managed to cut through all other layers, which is only possible if there were already preexisting layers when the intrusion occurred.
Or us, the Sun rises in the East and sets in the West. But at the poles, there are no directions. From the North Pole, whichever way we look it is South, and from the South Pole, whichever way we look, it is North. There is no Sunrise or Sunset at the polar regions as we experience at lower latitudes. The Sun appears above the horizon in Summer and makes a 360° circle in the sky - over a period of 187 days at the North Pole 90° North latitude. And in winter, the Sun is below the horizon for 163 days of darkness and 24 days of semi-darkness when the Sun is just below the horizon. It's not exactly six months of darkness/sunlight at the poles. (<span>In Svalbard, </span>Norway, the northernmost inhabited region of Europe, there is no sunset from approximately 19 April to 23 August, and no sunrise between November 14 and January 29.)<span> Needless to mention, when it is summer in the Northern hemisphere, it is winter in the South</span>