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A divergent plate boundary.
Well, there are no stars with no habitable zone or very inferior ones.
It cannot, a star can only have one or no habitable zone. Actually, many stars in the universe have none (or very, very inferior ones.) There are various reasons; one of them being that most stars exist in groups of two or more, making it difficult for a planet to have a stable orbit with just the right amount of constant starlight to be habitable.
The Dead Sea fault zone is located on a Transform boundary.
A destructive plate boundary (WITH a subduction zone!)
The epipelagic ocean zone is most habitable.
The epipelagic ocean zone is most habitable.
The epipelagic ocean zone is most habitable.
Habitable zone
Habitable zone
Habitable zone
Habitable zone
The habitable zone is that zone in which water is liquid. Without liquid water, life as we know it would not be possible.
The habitable zone is defined as the region in a star centered orbit where an Earth like planet can maintain liquid water on its surface.
No. The habitable zone starts near the Earth, a few million miles inside its orbit around the sun and ends just beyond the orbit of Mars. Uranus is much too far away in a colder region of space due to a decreased radiation from the Sun.
A divergent plate boundary.
If We are talking about planets, That planet need to me in what they called Habitable Zone What Is a Habitable Zone A Habitable Zone is the distance between a Star (Sun) and a planet, in which a planet like Earth can maintain liquid (water) and a distance which can allow water not to freeze or evaporates.