powerful flood of water, ice, mud, and rock.
Mountains rivers, sea, many islands, volcanos, lakes, forests, etc.
Glaciers are defined as rivers of ice that slowly slide from the mountains to the sea.
- Antarctica hasn't rocks on the surface and rivers to trasport salt. - Ice has an extremely low concentration of sodium chloride.
delta
arctic?
salt is formed in the sea by water from rivers and streams washing salt from the ground into the ocean.
Volcanos are just merely mountains with magma at its centre. If it's under the sea, it's possible that the volcano could have been formed before the sea formed there, the water then went in the magma deposit and caused it to create a cap for the volcano.
False. They are formed by erosional work of oceans
the medeturanian sea was the river that formed the Tigris and Euphrates rivers
During the winter, the sea ice freezes. As well, glacial 'rivers' formed on the continent flow into salt water, forming ice tongues. Eventually, with the action of ocean waves, these tongues break off the continental ice sheet and when free-floating, are called icebergs.
The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.
· young ice (newly formed flat, sea or lake ice)