Amphibious airplanes can take off and land on water or land. They are fixed-wing seaplanes that are equipped with retractable wheels.
Amphibious helicopters are modified helicopters that can take off and land on either water or land. They are invaluable for rescue work on the water.
That'd be an amphibious airplane
land slides form when the ground gets too soft from water (ex. rain.)
Lands reclaimed by the sea can be called either land fills or reclamation ground. In New Zealand, it is called land rehabilitation.
No. An aircraft takes off and lands into the wind. (Or as close as possible to directly into the wind).
TailSpin
Land and water are connected through various processes such as the water cycle, where water evaporates from bodies of water and lands on the ground as precipitation. Additionally, rivers and streams flow across the land, carrying water from higher elevations to lower elevations. Coastal areas also demonstrate the connection between land and water, where the land meets the sea, influencing ecosystems and coastal processes.
Yes, the word 'lands' is the plural form for the singular noun 'land'. The noun land is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for an area that someone owns; an area of ground, especially one that is used for a particular purpose such as farming or building; the part of the Earth's surface that is not the ocean; a word for a place or a thing. The word 'land' is also a verb: land, lands, landing, landed.
because they have gills to breathe on both lands
they live on both land and water but mostly water very rarely land
Drained lands are lands which used to be swamps, but which had a lot of water removed in order to make them into more usual dry land that can be used for farming, housing etc.
They live on both land and water.
Water flowing out of the ground is a spring. An artesian well is one example of water under pressure flowing out of the ground.