The Milk River runs through the very southern part of Alberta. This is the only river in Alberta that doesn't run north to the Arctic Ocean or to Hudson's Bay, and is the only river in Alberta that does not originate from Alberta, but instead from the mountains of Montana. It flows up through Alberta, and back down again into the States, all the way to the Gulf of Mexico.
The wind can move it. You'd be surprised at what wind can do!
The wind can move it. You'de be surprised at what wind can do!
yea
sometimes
Those would be found on the lowlands along the southern Gulf of Mexico and on the Yucatan peninsula, and across the borders with Guatemala and Belize.
Your question makes no sense, but rain averages can go as little as 12 inches per year on the Sonoran and Chihuahuan deserts, up to 80 inches of rain on the lowlands along the southern Gulf of Mexico coast.
Mississippi gets a lot of rain, as it is on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico.
There are a variety of rain forests found in Mexico. They are located in southeastern Mexico, along the Gulf of Mexico.
500,000
Low-lying areas along the Gulf of Mexico and Yucatan Peninsula receive in excess of 1,000 millimeters (40 inches) of rainfall in an average year, with the wettest region being the southeastern state of Tabasco, which typically receives approximately 2,000 millimeters (80 inches) of rainfall on an annual basis.
It is not dumped directly, but dragged into the sea by weather the rain and wind, or transported trough water currents. All countries around the Gulf of Mexico (Mexico, the United States, Cuba) contribute to such problem.
they live in southern Mexico, Central America, South America, Caribbeans, and in rain forest.
The Mexican tamandua (species: Tamandua mexicana), found in the rain-forests of central and southern Mexico.
Yes, but they cleared such forests to create grasslands; the clearings then were used to build cities and grow crops.
They are found in tropical forests from southern Mexico to Brazil.