a political map
political map
The political map as continents and territories over time change, divide and or come together. The physical map does change but this is eventually after hundreds or thousands of years.
A political world map is more likely to change than a physical world map because political boundaries, governments, and international relations are constantly shifting compared to physical features like landforms and climate which change at a slower pace.
A political map is most likely to change because if you think of politics the politics can change anytime but people can't just say there's a new continent by tomorrow.
it can be both, but more likely is it a chemical change.
it can be both, but more likely is it a chemical change.
The simplest way to put it would be to say borders move more than mountains.
"Better" is not the term you would use for comparing physical to chemical without defining the principle of what is better, but a chemical change is a more permanent change that will more than likely require input of energy.
You would find Europe's largest mountain range, the Alps, on a physical map due to its geographical features. Political maps typically show boundaries, cities, and countries, rather than physical features like mountain ranges.
Some other types of maps include thematic maps which focus on specific themes such as population distribution or climate patterns, topographic maps that show elevation and terrain features, and cartogram maps that distort the size of regions based on a specific variable like population or economic data.
Physical Change
It would more than likely steer people from the whole political scene. More would be less interested in a political society.
More likely than not because the political, financial and economic conditions upon which the financial plan was built have changed.