wind, fire, water
stress changes the earth's surface by the way it looks and the layers.
Because when I look up from the Earth, the surface of the Moon looks like nothing on Earth.
Landslides can make new lands after they occur. Because it looks different than before it occurred. landslides can change water sources too.
Landslides can make new lands after they occur. Because it looks different than before it occurred. landslides can change water sources too.
it looks distorted
That's because it looks mainly blue, from space. With the clouds it looks like a blue marble.The Earth is called the "blue planet" because the surface is composed mostly of water. Over 70 % of the Earth's surface is water.Water looks blue from space mainly because it reflects the blue atmosphere.However, the full explanation is quite complicated.(A clear sky in daylight looks blue from the Earth's surface, because of the way white light is scattered by the air molecules.)
because the oceans make up roughly 70% the earth, therefore when viewed from space, the earth looks mostly blue. If the surface of the earth was mostly jungle then it would be the green planet. Mars is called the red planet because when viewed from space it looks kind of red, that is because the surface of mars has a red tint to it.
The distinctive red color of Mars comes from iron oxide, or rust, on its surface. Earth looks blue and green from space due to its abundant water and plant life. The colors of a planet are determined by its composition and surface features.
No, Earth's surface has undergone significant changes over millions of years due to geological processes like plate tectonics, erosion, and volcanic activity. Continents have shifted, mountains have formed and eroded, and the climate has fluctuated, leading to a constantly changing landscape.
Because its mostly water.... water is blue
The Earth's surface looks the way it does because of the way the wind, water, and the tectonic plates move under the surface. They have shaped the surface into what it is today through millions of years of change.
The Earth looks bright - thus much of the light reaching Earth is reflected back into space.