South America
Both Physical And Political Maps Might Show The Same Land Areas Because , Political Maps Show The Major Land Areas And Physical Just Includes All The Land Areas. :)
No Spy books are normally about espionage where political thrillers are more about government's, they way they operate both overtly and covertly
Location affects natural resources because not all things grow everywhere, and not all regions of the world produce the same things.
Yes, the pulse rates of different locations should be the same since they are all coming from the heart.
omg i have the same stupid questions for civics and etc....
South Africa has always been in the same location
Mali.
they are both maps and both maps have oceans
there the same because there colerful and sometimes mark your destination
No. A cheetah is in Africa and a Roadrunner is in the American west. Only in a zoo would they live in the same location.
Devices in the same VLAN are part of the same subnet, or "group". (The fact of belonging to one VLAN or another is, to a certain degree, independent of the physical location, thus the name "virtual".)Devices in the same VLAN are part of the same subnet, or "group". (The fact of belonging to one VLAN or another is, to a certain degree, independent of the physical location, thus the name "virtual".)Devices in the same VLAN are part of the same subnet, or "group". (The fact of belonging to one VLAN or another is, to a certain degree, independent of the physical location, thus the name "virtual".)Devices in the same VLAN are part of the same subnet, or "group". (The fact of belonging to one VLAN or another is, to a certain degree, independent of the physical location, thus the name "virtual".)
To ease the growing tensions over the colonization of Africa. The purpose was not to ease tensions. Rather, the purpose was to colonize the entire continent. The Europeans that attended were not particularly interested in easing any growing tensions. To be it bluntly, those who attended drew the lines to show which European country was to be in charge in each part of Africa. No effort was made to keep people with the same languages and customs together within the same political and physical boundaries.
No. Your physical and email addresses are based on two unrelated addressing systems. Your physical or postal address relates to your actual geographical location relative to other physical addresses. A physical address is generally assigned to a particular geophysical location by the United States Postal Service (USPS) and is rarely if ever changed.Although your email address functions in much the same way as a physical address, providing a unique identifying label by which personal communications can be sent to you, it has no "physical" existence. It is simply a unique identification code on a computer network. It is this uniqueness, rather than its location that allows your email messages to find you. Therefore, it can be changed as often you wish, yet still refer to the same person.
Divine Crow: Place is something like "Jim's House" & Location is like the exact address. So the Location will always be the same but place can change. For example: Jim moves and he lives in Africa now.
I exist as a computer program, so I do not have physical form or a location. My operations are carried out using digital processing which does not generate heat in the same way as a physical device.
Political maps show borders, cities, and capitals, while physical maps show topographic features like mountains, rivers, and landforms. Both types of maps can include labels and legends to help explain the information displayed. Additionally, both political and physical maps use colors and symbols to represent different geographical features.
Simply put, no. Geometric political boundaries effectively separate 2+ pieces of land/territory, but not the people. Take Africa for example. Since Africa's borders were arbitrarily drawn by the British, they didn't take the hundreds of tribes in Africa into consideration. Plenty of Africans were in the same tribe but they were living, and being separated by, the borders.