Yes, reported natural phenomena, such as tsunamis, can significantly affect people both directly and indirectly. Directly, they can lead to loss of life, injuries, and destruction of property in affected areas. Indirectly, they can cause long-term psychological impacts, economic disruptions, and displacement of communities. The awareness and preparedness for such events can also influence how communities respond and recover.
the natural invirment is that the fishes might die because of the earthpuake on the bottom you know I wonder if the fishes could fell it
A earthquake can push the plates underwater and be forced up quckily.This pushes the water up rapidly and creates a tsunami.
A tsunami affects the biosphere by destroying certain species. It deposits salt water into previously fresh water environments. It upsets the ecological balance of the area.
Yes. Many Japanese died as a result of an earthquake and tsunami, as did those in Christchurch New Zealand as the result of an earthquake.
no, but climate changes affect natural disasters.
A tsunami has little effect on the atmosphere. A tsunami is a natural disaster that can not be prevented. It is a underwater earthquake that happens when plates collide. The theory of plate tectonics explains earthquakes and other geological occurrences.
report of tsunami
the natural invirment is that the fishes might die because of the earthpuake on the bottom you know I wonder if the fishes could fell it
A tsunami may affect the land by damaging plants, trees, buildings can break down and beaches.
it kills
No. The tsunami did reach California and caused some damage there, but tsunamis do not affect weather.
it makes them scared:)
No. Tsunamis do not affect the weather.
The 2011 Japan Tsunami did not affect Pakistan in any way.
They destroy homes and lives
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Evolution by natural selection is currently the only viable theory explaining the diversity of life. However, the mechanism of natural selection is not the only mechanism to affect evolution. There are phenomena such as genetic drift, biased gene conversion, intragenomic conflict, and so on, that aren't exactly the same as natural selection (although they are all intertwined and all affect one another), but do affect the direction of evolution.