November 27, 2007
- wat four forces may combine to form a landslide?
is it minor earthquake, volcanoes, gravity, and erosions from rivers, rain, glacuiers, or ocean water?
November 18, 2007
- Just a farming scenario. what would you do?
This is a scenario that I have to study for school.
are the owner/manager of a beef cattle property of 500 acres. (…) - Reality Check.If you were the first person to sail a boat up to the shores of Easter Island?
Please state your religious beliefs and then choose one of the following. (…)
November 15, 2007
- biology questions?
please tell me what these diseases or disorders in the digestive system is 1.small hardened cholesterol deposits block the duct to the gall bladder and cause pain, nausea, vomiting, and possible fever. (…)
November 14, 2007
- What is the biggest environmental problem facing crop production?
a.Lack of fertilizer b.Lack of water c.
erosion d. pesticide overuse e.
build up
September 25, 2007
- The Rising Sea from Global Warming and Erosion
Land is washed away naturally by sea currents, water, ice, wind or living organisms and is named erosion. This shift of land, mud, stone and additional particles has been happening for over 450 million years. This constitutes a downwardly apparent motion in reaction to gravitational force. Eroding is a natural action and can be good for the ecosystem, but more often than not it i worsened by human usage such that because of deforestation/removal of vegetation, overgrazing, unmanaged building or expanding of roads. Amended land consumption methods such as terrace-building and tree implanting can restrict erosion. Unreasonable wearing away can bring about difficulty such as ecosystem harm, loss of land and experiencing water sedimentation. The consequences of eroding is occasionally associated to overpopulation
Broadly speaking , erosion gets rid of soil at about the same rate that soil is developed. Nevertheless, expanded soil erosion at a a good deal more degenerate rate that it is formed is a modern concern and bears forever ascribable human beings* activities which impart the land unguarded and penetrable. (…)

