Describe the differences in environment between Oceania's low and high islands.
What will be an ideal response?
Much of Melanesia and Polynesia is part of the seismically active Pacific Rim of Fire. Volcanic eruptions, major earthquakes, and tsunamis are common across the region. Most of Oceania's islands were created by two distinct processes: either volcanic eruptions or, alternatively, coral reef-building. Those with a volcanic heritage are referred to as high islands because most of them rise hundreds and even thousands of feet in elevation above sea level. The Hawaiian Islands are good illustrations, with a volcanic mountain of more than 13,000 feet (4000 meters) on the Big Island of Hawaii. Tonga, Samoa, Bora Bora, and Vanuatu provide other examples of high islands. Even larger and more geographically complex are the continental high islands as found in New Guinea, New Zealand, and the Solomon Islands. In contrast, low islands, as the name suggests, are formed from coral reefs, making the islands not just lower, but also flatter and usually smaller than high islands. Because the soils on these islands originated as
coral, it is generally less fertile than the soil of high islands and supports less varied plant life. Low islands often begin as barrier reefs around or over sunken volcanic high islands, resulting in an atoll.
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a. weapons of mass destruction. b. weapons of mass death. c. weapons of mutual destruction. d. world of mass destruction. e. with major destruction.
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Answer the following statement true (T) or false (F)
Meat consumption is more common in developed countries than in developing countries
Indicate whether the statement is true or false.
Passive margins are also referred to as ____
a. Converging-type margins b. Pacific-type margins c. Atlantic-type margins d. Basin-type margins e. Inactive-type margins