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Scientist cannot safety do anything with measurements. They have to measure everything out.
It depends on what the glacier picked up along the way and what it might have run into
As glaciers move, they can carve out deep depressions in the land called cirques. When the glacier retreats or melts, these cirques can become filled with water, forming lakes. Glaciers can also create moraines, which are piles of debris that dam up valleys, creating lakes behind them.
I have this for homework but umm this is the answer if u need help. The land might look different because glacier might melt on land and freeze the whole place. Also the climate might get to cold the place will be slippery.
CSIRO might employ forensic scientists. They work with the Police, but not for the Police, so dont get confused with that.
Not at all. You might not be able to measure it with your common household thermometer, but scientists can measure temperatures even colder than that.
convection below the crust.
by melting
in glacier
Scientist cannot safety do anything with measurements. They have to measure everything out.
The mass of an object does not change , but its weight can vary.
The mass of an object does not change , but its weight can vary.
I believe that scientists wanted a way to locate and measure earthquakes.
There are a number of instruments that might be used to study such a phase transition, depending on precisely what it is you're trying to measure. A couple of guesses: thermometer, calorimeter.
It depends on what the glacier picked up along the way and what it might have run into
scientists can measure the amount of stress on the rocks at fault lines. this stress will keep building up until the rock can't handle the stress and slips. this is how scientists can determine where an earthquake might be but they can never tell when
As glaciers move, they can carve out deep depressions in the land called cirques. When the glacier retreats or melts, these cirques can become filled with water, forming lakes. Glaciers can also create moraines, which are piles of debris that dam up valleys, creating lakes behind them.