Answer: Desertification
Explanation: Desertification means “the process by which fertile land becomes desert, typically as a result of drought, deforestation, or inappropriate agriculture.”
So it might also be deforestation. I hope that helps and I apologize in advance if I’m wrong.
Answer and Explanation:
A. Geographers can map data that reveals the number of supermarkets and grocery stores in the region, the difficulty of access to supermarkets and grocery stores and the availability of vegetable gardens and food production sites in the region.
B. These regions promote a greater demand for fresh food, but the increasing urbanization and industrialization of these areas reduces the agricultural areas and, therefore, decreases the availability of these foods. In addition, the busy life of the inhabitants makes them look for faster and already prepared foods, which are industrialized products.
C. An impact that a food desert can provide is the mass malnutrition of the population, as well as a series of other diseases that can lead to a progressive decrease in the population of the region.
Herbivores will have less to eat cause more to die off which in turn effects the the predators who eat such herbivores will also have less to eat in the both are be effected negatively
Answer:
Glacier Deposits
Coastal Deposits
Rivers
Explanation:
These are all depositional landforms.
Glacier Deposits:
When a glacier moves over a landscape, it picks up and carries with it rocks, soil and other forms of rubble. When the glacier retreats, the rubble contained within it is left behind in the new landscape.
Coastal Deposits:
Waves transport materials such as sand, rocks, shells and dirt and drop them to form both underwater and above-surface landforms.
Beaches are made up largely of sediment deposited there by waves. These types of coastlines are an example of depositional landforms that change rapidly as existing sediment is eroded and new sediment deposited.
Waves can also deposit sediment in areas offshore, where they build up to be sandbars and sand dunes. This buildup usually occurs when waves crash in shallow waters and draw some of the sediment from the bottom back out toward the ocean.
Rivers:
Rivers can also carry sediment downstream to deposit it when the water enters into a larger body of water.