Answer:
history influences geography; but geography has no historical influence
Explanation:
This is because History definitively effects Geography because what people do in the past. And Geography effects history. Take the great flood for example, that is the largest flooded recorded in Oregon, Nevada, and California.
What, is being called the midpoint exactly? My guess would be that Point C is the midpoint because it is the middle point of a line segment.
It’s b dry i know because i took this back a while ago
1:Plates move away from one another at divergent boundaries. This happens at mid-ocean ridges<span>. Plates move towards one another at convergent boundaries; one plate is forced below another in a process called subduction.
2:</span><span>In areas where the </span>plates<span> come together, sometimes volcanoes </span>will<span> form. Volcanoes</span>can<span> also form in the middle of a </span>plate<span>, where magma rises upward until it erupts on the seafloor, at what is called a “hot spot.” The Hawaiian </span>Islands<span> were </span>formed<span> by such a hot spot occurring in the middle of the Pacific </span>Plate<span>.
I hope this helps!</span>