Answer:
the answer is the first one!
Explanation:
I did it. do you like food?
2) How would you explain to someone why we have seasons? Why does Hawaii not have all 4 seasons like other states on the mainland?
3) Why is the amount of light at the equator versus the poles having an effect on temperature? What are the two main factors that contribute to this difference?
4) Describe how air moves in the cycle of the Hadley Cell.
5) What causes atmospheric circulation? What winds drive Hawaii's weather?
Answer:
1.Climate is used to describe what the weather is like for long periods of time in a specific place. Weather is the short term changes in the atmosphere.
2.As the earth spins on its axis, producing night and day, it also moves about the sun in an elliptical (elongated circle) orbit that requires about 365 1/4 days to complete. The earth's spin axis is tilted with respect to its orbital plane. This is what causes the seasons. This is because there is only a slight variation in length of night and day from one part of Hawaii to another and because all its islands lie within a narrow latitude band.
3.As distance from the equator increases, the amount of energy and sunlight changes. In winter when the northern hemisphere is tilted away from the Sun, light and energy spreads out over the tilted surface. As the Earth's axis tilts away from the Sun, the light and energy decreases with distance from the equator.
4.air rises up into the atmosphere at or near the equator, flows toward the poles above the surface of the Earth, returns to the Earth's surface in the subtropics, and flows back towards the equator.
5. The Sun heats the Earth more at the equator than at the poles. It's also affected by the spin of the Earth. In the tropics, near the equator, warm air rises. Trade winds drive Hawaii's weather.
Answer:
whether is short term , months
climate is long term , years
seasons are created from the earths tilt
Explanation:
thats all I know good luck with the rest hope this helps :)
All veins are important because they carry blood throughout the body and all veins have a specific purpose/job to do to help the body function. Many veins take the deoxygenated blood...blood that doesn't have oxygen in them any more because it was used up...and transport it back to the heart where the heart pumps the deoxygenated blood to the lungs to become oxygenated...oxygen is put back into the blood.
here are two of the many veins in the body:
- pulmonary veins and other veins involved with the heart system/the functioning of the heart
-systemic veins: I believe this also deals with the heart but it can also deal with veins in the upper part of our body (includes: head, neck/throat area and chest area I believe). We also have veins in the lower part of the body (abdomen (area that contains organs/stomach area), legs, and whatever else falls under the lower part of the body.
I tried to keep this in simple terms from what I learned in biology. For example, within the veins in the abdomen there are more specific names to the veins and their function.
B) communicate your results to others
C) design and conduct an experiment
D) collect information on the Internet
Answer:
Translocation
Explanation:
Translocation is a chromosomal defect in which part of a chromosome breaks off and reattaches backward on the same chromosome.
Translocation can happen due to many reasons like:
A) Some of the changes that arise around the time of conception or production of sperm or egg.
B) The inheritance of altered chromosome from father or mother.
Translocations can be divided into two forms:
In reciprocal translocations, fragments of two chromosomes break off from two different places, break and swap each other's segments. While in Robertsonian translocation one chromosome attached with other.
Hope it help!
Answer:
Translocation :)
Explanation:
B