That would very much depend on where you are and when you were talking about. The current climate is about 0.4 degrees above the average for the past 150 years. If go go further back, that difference is less. We were very cool, almost 0.5 degrees coolers then average in 1979.
The bottom line is that there has been almost no detectable difference between now and the past 200 years. Weather changes are larger then any climate change we have experienced.
Landforms are natural wonders such as mountains, deltas, and plateaus climate is the normal weather and temperature of a place
Yes. Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas. If levels of it in the atmosphere are higher than normal, then they trap more heat. This is causing global warming, and the world warming is causing changes in climate.
they have long roots that branch out perpendicular to the plant and they store water inside them. the spines on a Cati acts as a leaf of a normal plant.
No, an El Niño event is a temporary climate phenomenon characterized by warmer-than-average sea surface temperatures in the equatorial Pacific Ocean. It typically lasts for several months to a year before transitioning back to normal conditions.
Marine West Coastal Climate, Miditerranean Climate, Humid Continental climate, Humid Subtropical Climate. the answer !
The normal climate of a equilateral rain forest is a tropical rain forest climate. In this type of climate it rains every month, it is usually very hot and wet year round.
Peru's climate is tropical, sub tropical , and normal.
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaapsoluty
yes, condensation drip in normal
50 - 60 degrees
snowing in summer and winter with very few sun
The climate sort of has to do with the temperature. If the temperature is 3 degrees then the climate is cold. So what ever the temperature is to the deep sea biome then that is the climate.
Leopard geckos live in deserts, so they have a desert- like climate
normal or 80 degrees
25degree centigrade
because its normal?!
1 week