The earth's surface changes through erosion, due to wind, water, vegetation, ice or temperature
The continent that is moving significantly more slowly than the others is Antarctica. It has been described as the slowest moving continent due to its unique position and the way it is situated on the Earth's surface.
Two natural factors that change Earth's surface slowly are weathering (breaking down of rocks into smaller pieces) and erosion (transport of sediment from one place to another). Two natural factors that can change Earth's surface rapidly are volcanic eruptions (depositing new material and altering the landscape) and earthquakes (shifting land quickly due to tectonic forces).
About one third of the land surface of the earth is desert.
The hypothesis is called continental drift. It suggests that the Earth's continents were once part of a single supercontinent called Pangaea and have since moved slowly over time to their current positions. This movement is driven by the process of plate tectonics.
Examples of slow changes on Earth's surface include weathering of rocks over time, erosion of land by water and wind, and gradual movement of tectonic plates. These processes can take thousands to millions of years to significantly alter the Earth's surface.
water
The continent that is moving significantly more slowly than the others is Antarctica. It has been described as the slowest moving continent due to its unique position and the way it is situated on the Earth's surface.
Earth's surface and inside the planet slowly change rocks from one kind to another.
A geographical change means one which occurs to the land and its features. This can be a result of natural events like flood or erosion which slowly eat away at the Earth's surface.
Hemisphere
about one fourth
Two natural factors that change Earth's surface slowly are weathering (breaking down of rocks into smaller pieces) and erosion (transport of sediment from one place to another). Two natural factors that can change Earth's surface rapidly are volcanic eruptions (depositing new material and altering the landscape) and earthquakes (shifting land quickly due to tectonic forces).
One third is surface and the rest is the sea.
obsidian is one of them
About one third of the land surface of the earth is desert.
the earths surface is 80% water. so no.
one major contributor is moving water