Want this question answered?
Land forms and water forms can impact the population of region because if they get resources the populations will increase. Also if there was a volcano and it caused a volcanic eruption the people near the volcano
a shape or a type of land forms! a shape or a type of land forms! a shape or a type of land forms! a shape or a type of land forms!
There was a single transition from aquatic to terrestrial habitats
The impact that hurricanes hove on the environment is that all the animals and habitats are destroyed and the amount of damage that the hurricane could have made could not be fixable
Land forms that are associated with wave action are coastal land forms. The main land form associated with wave action is called a spit.
Land forms and water forms can impact the population of region because if they get resources the populations will increase. Also if there was a volcano and it caused a volcanic eruption the people near the volcano
Erosion is not an "impact" process, it is a gradual, degrading process.
1. They can make dams, carve mountains, farm land, make roads, and build houses, but we are taking away habitats from plants and animals.
Tornadoes primarily change habitats by destroying vegetation, especially trees.
Urbanization can lead to increased pressure on rural land for development and infrastructure. This can result in the conversion of agricultural land to urban use, leading to reduced agricultural productivity and loss of natural habitats. It can also impact rural communities by influencing their social and economic dynamics.
Humans impact the tundra in negative ways. They drill for oil, clear out land, and lay pipelines and each of these things destroys habitats, making many species of animals homeless.
terrestrial habitats. (land), aquatic habitats. (water)
Explosion land
Animalia are found in virtually ALL habitats. both on land and inwater.
The most serious impact is usually the destruction of trees and animal habitats.
land
No, that is not the case. There were many land habitats during the Mesozoic, and dinosaurs lived in all of them. They first evolved in Pangaea during the Triassic, when almost all land was a desert. After that, however, they evolved into new forms and adapted to new habitats that developed, including forests, swamps, floodplains, and plains covered in ferns (there were no grasslands during the Mesozoic).