These are obviously called the "polar zones," the Arctic and the Antarctic.
The Earth's rotation turns the polar high pressure systems westward as they move from the poles (westerlies), and the subtropical high pressure systems eastward as they move toward the equator (tropical easterlies).
If you fly West to East or the opposite you'd go through 24 time zones. If you flew directly over the poles you could do it and stay in two time zones.
Volcanoes are formed by tetonic plates pushing together. Therefore they often form in lines. Such as the Himalyers and the alpes.
Well, an example of something that does not affect earth's climate zones would be a piece of lint on your carpet
Earth has three main climate zones. These climate zones are the polar zone, the tropical zone, and the temperate zone.
These are obviously called the "polar zones," the Arctic and the Antarctic.
Earths Rotation The Coriolis effect
earthquake zones are located in and around the mid-ocean ridge.
caca is the answer
why is there not one single convection cell that stretches from the poles to the equator
Yes it is a good model for the earths dfferent zones
These are obviously called the "polar zones," the Arctic and the Antarctic.
The three main climatic zones in the world are tropical, temperate, and polar. Tropical zones are located near the equator and have warm temperatures year-round. Temperate zones have moderate temperatures and distinct seasons, while polar zones are located near the North and South Poles and are characterized by cold temperatures.
The Earth's rotation turns the polar high pressure systems westward as they move from the poles (westerlies), and the subtropical high pressure systems eastward as they move toward the equator (tropical easterlies).
If you fly West to East or the opposite you'd go through 24 time zones. If you flew directly over the poles you could do it and stay in two time zones.
On a global scale there are four major air pressure zones. There's the equatorial low, the subtropical hights, the subpolar lows, and the polar hights.together they carry air back and forth between the equator and the poles and between earths atmosphere and it's surface
Stratosphere, mesosphere, and thermosphere . :)