awey
yes
All layers of the Earth are moving, in some fashion.
The rotation of the Earth has some affect. The difference in temperature is the main cause, with cold and warm temperatures moving the air about.
Some stars ARE moving towards us. The Andromeda Galaxy will collide with us in millions of years. The universe is expanding because of the "Big Bang", so almost everything is moving away from us.
because of the gravity of the earth and it's moving surface inside the solar system.!
Usually not. To slow a moving object down, some force must act on the moving object. On Earth, this force is usually friction. In outer space, there is no significant amount of friction, so moving objects tend to continue moving, unless they are slowed down by OTHER forces, such as gravity.
I would think that current evidence suggests that the stars moving away from earth, some of them in far distant galaxies moving at unimaginably high speeds, are going much faster than stars moving toward us. The entire Andromeda galaxy is moving toward us and will collide with us in roughly 5 billion years, and it is not moving anywhere near as fast as the distant retreating galaxies.
All the continents are moving in different directs but if you go to google images and type 'tectonic plate movement' at least one of those pictures will show what directions different continents are moving in
Well, technically yes. Everything in the universe is moving at some rate. Not to mention that the earth is moving, thus everything on Earth is moving with it. !
Some relationships between moving continents, geothermal energy from within the earth and metamorphic rock are when the continents move it forces rocks into the hot core which then they absorb the geothermal energy and form the metamorphic rock.
Type your answer here... It is just some plates moving past each other I think
where do earth quakes after happen. after earth quakes some thing where happen.the land come up and hot quakes in the country some people deid in the country so some people want to moving to under country, .