Because the animals that live in the specific area, have different adaptations for each geographical area. For example, mice live in the desert and not in Alaska, because of their adaptations. Telling where an animal lives also tells the geography of the area? Does that make sense?
AnswerDomesticated dogs (like the kind you'd have in a house) are not part of nature. But there are wild dogs still in abundance in some places like africa, but cross-breeding between wild and domestic dogs has contaminated species, and few remain 100% natural.
Yes, lakes are formed naturally and thus are part of physical geography.
Yes, volcanoes are part of physical geography. Volcanoes are natural landforms and are not man-made. Thus, physical geography includes volcanoes.
No its shape Is odd.
physical is Like The Landforms and human Geography is like Population densities ..
A cloud would most likely be more related to physical geography than environmental geography. Clouds are part of the water cycle and are formed by the condensation of evaporated water from Earth's surface. This is hard for humans to control, and is part of a natural process.
Physical geography is a branch of Geography; the main branches of Geography are Physical and Human, these are mainly taught at school level. Physical geography relates to the natural environment.
There are 2 parts of geography. One is Physical Geography (biomes, climate, rocks e.g.) and the other is Human Geography (urbanisation, poverty, agriculture practices e.g.). Therefore, physical geography is considered to be part of science, and Human Geography is not part of science.
What are some examples of physical geography
The examples of biosphere in the Physical Geography are: plants, animals, one-celled organisms, etc.
The examples of biosphere in the Physical Geography are: plants, animals, one-celled organisms, etc.
Human geography is the study of people, where they lived, cultures, work, food, homes, and religion. Physical geography is the study of earth's land, features, landforms, mountains, valleys, plains, climate, environment, nonliving things, living things, plants, soil, and animals.