Hills like Buck Hill in MN.
Canada is north of the United States.
The U.S. has never owned Canada.
Canada didn't sell it to the US; Russia did. Canada owned it first, then Russia, now the US. Russia found it useless and hard to get to because of the water body that separated it from Russia.
Canada has better statistics than the US team because Canada is the home of Hockey, and more player's that are from Canada are usually good. TEAM CANADA ALL THE WAY!
the us
Glaciers shaped the Canadian landscape by sculpting valleys and creating lakes through erosion and deposition of sediment. They also left behind large deposits of till and moraines, contributing to the diverse topography of Canada. Melting glaciers have continued to impact the landscape by forming iconic features such as the Great Lakes and Niagara Falls.
glaciers
Glaciers, right? -^-^-
At the beginning of time there were no mountains or glaciers, there were also no planets or stars. Mountains can tell us where glaciers existed by the shape of the valleys between them, a "U" shaped valley usually means a glacier once flowed down it.
Yosemite Valley in California was formed by glaciers carving out the landscape during the last Ice Age. The Great Lakes in the Midwest were created by glaciers moving over the land and carving out deep basins which filled with water as the glaciers melted. The Finger Lakes region in New York was shaped by glaciers carving out deep, narrow lakes between steep hillsides.
cause there is and in southern US it's a little worm so glaciers couldn't really last last there as long in more up north.
moraine damming up runoff from melting continental glaciers.
The Rocky Mountain Range stretches across the western US from Texas to Canada. Tectonic activity and erosion by glaciers have sculpted the Rockies into dramatic peaks and valleys.
I believe it was called the ice age
It enabled the united states to expand across the continent.It enable the united states to expand across the continent.
The exception is glaciers. Glaciers are not sediment transporting agents; they are instead agents of erosion that can carry sediment as they move across the landscape. Rivers, wind, and waves are all examples of sediment transporting agents.
glaciers are just lots of ice. when this ice melts it turns into H2O (water). so glaciers give us water to drink.