The statement which best describes the connection between population distribution and natural disasters is, Natural disasters occur most often near bodies of water, which is where large concentrations of a population are often located.
Answer: Option A
<u>Explanation:</u>
Year after year, mankind is becoming more and more vulnerable to natural disasters. The main cause of this is mostly, the ever increasing population growth and globalization.
Urbanization and the increase in population distribution gives rise to the vulnerability of natural disasters. Almost 80% of the U.S. population are inhabitants of urban region, this results in an increase population in coastal regions, and such areas are often prone to flood. With more and more people residing to such areas, the chances of natural calamities also increases.
Kansas City has more thermal hot springs which elevate the temperature. The Pacific Ocean is near San Francisco, the high heat capacity of water absorbs large amounts of heat. The humidity in Kansas City is higher, water in the air absorbs heat which makes people feel more hot.
Hoped that helped
One example would be a worm, there are less fossil records, if any at all, of worms due to their completely soft-bodied form. They have no bones that could be preserved through time, and when decay happens, they mix with the soil and completely decay,
Another example would be Jellyfish, like the worm, this is a completely soft-bodied creature, and dead jellyfishes also decays unto the sea directly living no fossil behind. Fossils as one should remember are from the bones or shells that have been petrified through time, and has not decayed completely.
<span>Most countries were ruled by some form of authoritarian governments. This mostly included kings or religious leaders. There was no democracy and no things such as election, but rather the monarch could do as he or as she pleased. This slowly started to change with addition of constitutions and development of republican sentiment around the times of the fall of Bastille and the separation of the US.</span>