some of the people and other living thing will die or get sick, because they cant easily adopt the climate.
Climate change is the dominant reason why.
weather
Because explosions don't happen slowly
my computer is very fast
Changes on Earth can occur at various speeds depending on the scale and type of change. Some changes, like earthquakes or volcanic eruptions, can happen suddenly and impact large areas rapidly. Others, such as climate change or plate tectonics, happen gradually over longer periods of time, spanning thousands to millions of years.
b/c of fossils
you mean weather climate is weather over a LONG periond of time,and the anwer is (drum rool).......NO IMPOSILBE, well its nature and nature is not perdictible but a 99% cance of no
I don't think that anyone actually knows, but you never know they might be in a later fast and furious movie as I think that they are making a 6th and 7th fast and furious.
Depends on the depth and speed of the moving flow, but I wouldn't try it neveryhelrss.
Yes. It might not occur as fast, but the water is still exposed to the air.
Erosion can occur at varying speeds depending on factors like the type of rock or soil, climate conditions, and human activities. In some cases, erosion processes can happen relatively quickly, such as during heavy rainfall events or when strong winds are present. In other situations, erosion may occur more gradually over a longer period of time.
Natural climate change during most of the Cenozoic has occurred over a hundred thousand year cycle known as the Milankovich Cycle. This has been earth's primary driver of climate for millions of years. Any given year might be unusually warm or unusually cold. These natural variations are not considered to represent climate change. The smallest scale for change is about 5 years. If you have five above average years in a row, you can state that climate has changed. It could still change back, but for earth as a whole the 20th century represented a fairly steady pace of climate change, with the past three decades representing an unusually rapid rate of change. Virtually all of earth's climate scientists expect this rate to continue, if not increase, due to human activity in terms of the liberation of fossil carbon into CO2.