A. Straight up above the water
B.From the water toward the land
C.From the land toward the water
D.Straight over the land
From the sea towards the earth land
the answer is desert
They move west to east.
From the sea for the land
a
it rises
A
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Currents in the Northern Hemisphere move in a clockwise direction. Currents in the Southern Hemisphere move in a counter clockwise direction.
Warmer material in a convection current rises upwards.
the hot and dry air mass are most likely to rise
F.to the east G.to the west H.to the north I.to the south
A number of things. Outflow from the parent storm or a nearby storm can give a tornado a "push" in a new direction. Larger scale wind currents can change the direction of the parent storm itself
Convection currents move in upward direction
Currents in the Northern Hemisphere move in a clockwise direction. Currents in the Southern Hemisphere move in a counter clockwise direction.
The surface currents move in a clockwise direction in the Northern hemisphere, and move in a counter clockwise direction in the Southern hemisphere! Hope it helped:)
The current north of the equator moves clockwise.
clockwise
Warmer material in a convection current rises upwards.
because the surface currents move in huge circles ,they move clockwise in the northern hemisphere
the hot and dry air mass are most likely to rise
In the southern hemisphere, ocean currents generally move clockwise due to the Coriolis effect, which is the result of Earth's rotation. This means that currents tend to move to the left in the southern hemisphere. However, specific ocean currents may have variations in their flow direction based on local topography and wind patterns.
yes
the water or fluid will be moving the opposite direction
the hot and dry air mass are most likely to rise