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The Pacific Coast of the US.
You shouldn't ask me
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Perimeter is a length or a distance, just like depth, height, and circumference are. Any unit of length can be used to describe a perimeter. Some good ones are ... - nanometer - inch - kilometer - parsec - furlong - yard - league - mile - light-year.
Well, since sand is already very eroded rock a coastline would probably be affected more if the coast was rocky. The type of rock also would affect the rate of erosion. Sedimentary rock erodes faster than igneous and metamorphic im pretty sure. hope it helps.
It is impossible to drive around the perimeter of the US, although there are roads that travel near the coastline and near the borders.
Texas borders the Gulf of Mexico, so that would be the nearest coastline.
The perimeter of a circle would be the circumference.
The coastline would affect settlement because there would be lots of water resources and also ways to find food. The coastline would affect settlement because there would be lots of water resources and also ways to find food.
The perimeter would be 40cm.
The perimeter would be 28 cm
It would be difficult to pick between the Great Barrier Reef and Uluru/Ayers Rock.
It must be a perimeter. An area measurement would a square measurement like 56cm². ■
There really is no exact answer, but the most likely would be Russia due to its massive size and coastline. However, when you think of a beach, you normally do not think of a beach on the Arctic Ocean. The most likely answer to what we would classify as a beach would be Australia. I would think Canada would be up there as it has by far the most coastline. Also, Indonesia which is second.
The perimeter would be 4 inches !
You would also double the perimeter.
The perimeter would be 40.