Places like British Columbia, and newzealand.
You would find a hydroelectric power plat in a dam on a river. The dam would create a reservoir.
you could increase the height of the dam so that water will flow faster. that force of the water would give it more power.
i think you would find it in some were there is alot of green
Hydroelectric means electric power that is derived from water, typically moving water used to power machinery that generates electricity. A famed example of this would be the Niagara Hydroelectric plant, which harnesses the energy of the Niagara River to power generators that supply millions with electricity in their homes and businesses.
Hydroelectric power is generally made by water falling through a distance (waterfall, or dam) then striking the blades of a turbine and making them rotate to generate electricity. None of these operations is noisy. Hydroelectric power plants are generally constructed in isolation where any noise is not a problem or where the noise (waterfall) was present naturally and the diversion of the water to the plant would only lessen the natural noise levels.
The organelle that you would expect to find in a plant cell but not animal cell is the centrosomes.
Along rivers or streams, at the foot of hills and mountains with ponds or lakes, and at the mouths of bays and inlets where there are tides. Hydroelectric plants operate on the basis of gravity moving water downward. So the requirement for hydroelectric power is water and a difference in height, altitude or depth. Most Hydroelectric plants are located on rivers and used dams to provide the difference in height. In some cases, hydro plants have been built at the foots of hills or mountains that had lakes on them at higher levels. If the difference in altitude is sufficient, a small flow and a small power plant can produce an impressive amount of power. It is possible to get hydroelectric power from the movement of water without a dam, and this is done in rivers with sufficient current, but where damming the river would be too destructive to the land or things on the land. It is also done in places with tidal flows that are sufficiently energetic. Micro-hydroelectric sites can even be small streams, if the water flow is sufficiently reliable.
If their habitat was in the area that as flooded to make the lake for the hydroelectric plant, I would say yes.
plant cell
Hydropower is dependent on the sun because the sun makes the water cycle work. The sun evaporates water in the ocean and from other places and then it rains into rivers which in turn flow into the Hydroelectric dams. If the sun wasn't there the water cycle would stop.
no. muscle is animal tissue
The leaves