Oceans affect climates by slowing the rise and fall of air temperatures. Because water has a high specific heat, it holds heat longer than air.
By slowing it down or speeding it up.
It depends on what is happening to your heart, if it may be slowing down or speeding up.
High elevation
By making the people trying and learning to adjust to the warmer climates,and the climates would be all off balance.
cuz i dont know -.-AnswerWater Tempuratures
In polar climates, No month has an average temperature higher than 10"c
Forests (and all vegetation) remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. This reduces the effects of the enhanced greenhouse effect, slowing the rising temperatures of global warming.
Birds affect plant distribution in many ways.Eating seeds, and distributing them through waste.Burying seeds for later use, and leaving them.Eating the plants, slowing growth.Eating bugs that would otherwise eat the plants, speeding up growth.
how interfer the temperatures of land and water during the months of year
will a speeding ticket in Europe affect my U.S. driving record?
The main forces acting on the pram will be the force the person pushing the pram exerts on it, the friction against the ground and air resistance. When the pram is speeding up the force the pusher exerts will be larger than the combined force of the air resistance and the friction against the ground. When the pram is moving at a constant speed the forces acting on it will be balanced I.e. pushing force= air resistance+friction. When the pram is slowing down the air resistance and the friction will be greater than the pushing force.
Land areas can heat faster and to greater temperatures, and they also cool faster at night. Continents, with or without tall mountains, create weather cycles with a higher temperature range, and with seasonal rainfall. They can be hotter and dryer than maritime climates. Vegetation and land cover can also affect weather on a seasonal basis. In the temperate climates, snow further decreases winter temperatures because of its albedo.