I’ll use myself as an example and see if that helps answer ur question. I knew little about global warming and climate change; i knew it existed. But I had no idea what fossil fuels were, and was honestly too lazy to look it up. Same thing with everything else that affected the climate and the issue of global warming. I knew it was there, but I was too lazy to look it up, and I didn’t know where to begin my research. Not knowing if the information I was getting over the internet was accurate or not didn’t help either. But when I took an environmental geography class this semester, I was absolutely shocked at how bad and how serious this issue actually is. It’s also very interesting to learn about, and it’s so bad that it really prompts people to want to do something about it. Many people I know switched their majors to env geo, and there are a lot cases where people around the world leave their current jobs (even CEO’s) to dedicate their lives to helping the environment.
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seeps in to ground water . what is the life or nuclear waste? it's a lot longer than the storage places will last.
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Answer:
where are the questions mate?? there gone
Explanation:
The right answer is aborigine my dude
South American and Nazca tectonic plate boundary;
The boundary between the South American and the Nazca plates is a vibrant one. These two plates have the same density, so they collide and lift the land upwards, which is why the Andean Mountain Range formed. Occasionally there are earthquakes and they can be very strong. This is a convergent boundary.
Indian and Eurasian tectonic plate boundary;
The tectonic between the Indian and the Eurasian tectonic plates is also a convergent one, where we have two tectonic plates with the same density pushing against each other, and thus lifting up the land, which is how the Himalayan Mountain Range was formed. The earthquakes are relatively rare, and are of different velocity.
Pacific and North American tectonic boundary;
The border between these two plates is a a convergent one as well, but the Pacific plate has a smaller density than the North American one, so it is subducting underneath it. This brings in a very big geological activity, so there's multiple volcanoes and volcanic activities, as well as a big amount of earthquakes.