the intertidal zone. its just one but ii hope that's the answer
Foreshore http://www.unesco.org/csi/pub/source/ero13.htm
It is the scale.
The steeper the slope, the contour lines go further along the area. You can also determine the flatness of the area with these lines.
Yes. That's the Earth's 'Tropic Zone'.
elevation
The area between bar lines
You can use SAS. This means you are given two lengths of lines and one angle. You can then work out the area
Picture a rectangle. The area is the space inside the lines. The perimeter is the distance around the lines.
You cannot. At least, not one point. If the distance between the two given points is b, and the area of the triangle is A, then let h = 2A/b Then draw two lines parallel to the line formed by the two given points - one above and one below, each of these lines being at a distance h from the first line. Any point on either of these two lines will meet your requirements.
Earthquakes are not given names. They are usually referred to by the area in which they occur
its called measures
the steepness of an area
No man's landThe area between two trenches or lines of soldiers is known as "no man's land." This phrase was used in World War I to describe the area of land between fighting groups that no man wanted to enter for fear of being killed.
If two lines are parallel then the area of the plane between them is symmetrical about its centre-line (parallel to and mid-way between the boundary lines).
=D i think itssurface area =D
The area was settled by the Spanish and used to be part of Mexico. Most of the Spanish-language names are the names they were given at the time of settlement.
You cannot. In general there is no relationship between the area of a slab and its thickness.