Answer:
Explanation:
1 a process by which nutrients are dissolved in a body of water
Eutrophication
Eutrophication is the process whereby nutrients in excess are brought into a body of water which causes a bloom in the growth of plants.
This is usually as a result of runoff carrying nutrients from farmlands such as fertilizers.
2 the development of higher than normal salt content in the soil
Salinization
Salinization is the dissolution of salts in water. It is often described as the degree of salts in water. When salts contents in soils increases than normal, the soil becomes salinized.
3 the use of leadership positions for personal gain
Corruption
The illicit use of power for personal gain by people in leadership is corruption. This is but one aspect of what corruption entails. Corruption is the abuse of power in leadership position.
4 movement from one place to another
Migration
The movement of people from one place to another is migration. Migration can be movemnet into a country which is called immigration. Emmigration is the movement from a country.
5 isolation from others
Seclusion
Seclusion is the removal from a group of people. It is a form of isolation from others
6 the removal of salt from something
Desalinization
The process of removing salt from something is known as desalinization. Several chemical procedures can be used to achieve this.
When other countries adopt European cultures etc
Folk culture is likely to thrive in central Africa.
The water cycle is something that was observed by simply looking at the world; almost all cultures had references to it at some point. However, approaching it from a modern day scientific viewpoint was an approach that was developed only in recent years.
Constructive plate boundaries
1) Convection currents in the mantle move the plates
2) 2 plates of oceanic crust diverge/pull apart e.g. North American and Eurasian plates.
3)
The rising magma forces the ends of the plate to push up and buckle.
This creates tensional cracks on the underside of the plates.
4) Magma is squeezed into the gap between the two plates and is cooled by the ocean to form new, solidified rock/basalt.
5) Rising magma forces its way through the tensional cracks and forms sub-marine shield volcanoes on the ocean floor.
6)
With repeated eruptions over millions of years they can grow until
they break the surface of the ocean and become volcanic islands e.g.
Iceland.