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It is improbable that underground nuclear tests can alter the axial tilt of the earth.
The nucleus is altered during nuclear reactions.
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Phosphates from detergents enter streams with run-off.
Not anything of any size that we're capable of building now or in the foreseeable future. But give us time.And it's "nuclear", not "nucular".
The colonial New England farmers altered their ecosystem by introducing domestic livestock. They also cleared extensive rows of trees and consolidated scattered parcels of land.
Dinsmore Alter has written: 'Atoms, rockets, and the moon' -- subject(s): Nuclear energy, Rockets (Aeronautics) 'Pictorial astronomy [by] Dinsmore Alter, Clarence H. Cleminshaw, and John G. Phillips' -- subject(s): Astronomy
correct(A.) burning of fossil fuels B. wildfires C. floods D. volcanic activity
they alter the earth by moving around and just shaping it in different ways. like when they move, the earth changes.....
Beavers are ecosystem engineers, because their actions widely affect the surrounding ecosystem. Beavers can create new wetlands by building dams, alter the make up of nearby forests by felling trees and allowing new forest growths to grow, and enrich the soil by slowing down water through dam building.
A nuclear war can alter the amount of daylight received during the day, but not the rotation of the Earth. The term "nuclear winter" refers to this effect. The theory goes that, just as with volcanic eruptions, if a large number of nuclear bombs were detonated, the fallout sent into the atmosphere would block enough sunlight to make the surface temperature colder, killing a large percentage of plant life (and, subsequently, animal life) on the planet. Therefore, in terms of sunlight reaching the planet surface, a nuclear war could actually reduce the length of a day. The Earth itself would continue rotating at the same speed, though.
yes usually around 10 to 15 dollars (alter servers)