The ozone layer is not growing larger. The ozone hole is getting larger. It is getting larger over Antarctica.
The Cenozoic era's surface was very bumpy and that when the Earth was flat. When the world started getting round Earths surface started getting flat, but that when there was a lot of earthquakes, which wiped out all the dinasours and made them exstinct.
Mt. Rainier's size is continually changing due to a variety of natural processes, but on a human timescale, it appears to be neither getting significantly larger nor smaller. It is still an active volcano, so future eruptions could potentially cause changes to its shape and size.
No, the relative sizes of the oceans change.
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge is in a constant process of growing at the boundary and shrinking as it moves away from the boundary. Therefore, on a year to year basis, it is both getting larger and smaller. In geologic time, however, it will start shrinking when the continents it is moving can no longer be moved toward each other due to collisions caused by plate tectonics
Because the population keeps getting larger.
An epoch is longer than an era. An epoch can last for more than one lifetime.
In short, it was a larger group.
An Ascending # is a # That Is Getting Larger. A Descending # is a # That Is Getting Smaller.
The ozone layer is not growing larger. The ozone hole is getting larger. It is getting larger over Antarctica.
Getting smaller is waning. Getting larger is waxing.
The ozone layer is not growing larger. The ozone hole is getting larger. It is getting larger over Antarctica.
No, as the f(x) values keep getting larger as x gets larger.
the stars
Dilation.
No, Orion is not getting larger. The Orion constellation appears to change position in the sky due to the Earth's rotation, but its physical size remains constant.
Humans evolved in the Pleistocene era, which is the most recent part of the larger Cenozoic era. Modern humans first begin appearing in the fossil record approximately 200,000 years ago.