South America and Australia are two continents whose edges are not all situated on plate boundaries. These continents have regions that are not along plate boundaries due to the complexities of the Earth's tectonic plates.
Australia is in the middle of the Australian-Indian plate. Antarctica has its own plate, but the actual continent doesn't get near the plate boundary. It's plate is called, oddly enough, the Antarctic plate. Who would have figured? You could say that Africa's edges aren't on plate boundaries, but there are some places in northern Africa that get pretty close to being on a boundary.
You can determine the streak of a mineral whose Mohs scale is higher than the streak plate by either filing or crushing with a hammer before rubbing the sample on a streak plate.
No, not all oak leaves have saw-like edges, but yes, some may have atypically, non-sinuate leaf margins. For example, the sawtooth oak (Quercus acutissima) is an example of a tree whose foliage recalls the edges of a saw.
Arthur Holmes's ideas in the 1920s about mantle convection and radioactive heating helped support Alfred Wegener's theory of continental drift by providing a mechanism for how the continents could move. This helped pave the way for the eventual acceptance of Wegener's ideas as the theory of plate tectonics.
A scientist by the name of Alfred Wegener proposed this theory about a century ago. It was not well-received at first, but after more and more evidence was discovered, it gradually became more accepted. Today, most scientists consider continental drift, formally known as the theory of plate tectonics, to be the correct explanation.
Europe and Asia have edges that are not ALL on plate boundaries.
Europe and Asia have edges that are not ALL on plate boundaries.
North America and South America have edges that are not all plate boundaries. The boundary between North and South America is known as the Central American Subduction Zone, where the Cocos Plate is subducting beneath the Caribbean Plate.
Africa and South America have edges that are not all on plate boundaries. For example, the coast of Africa along the Atlantic Ocean is a passive margin, and the edges of South America along the Pacific Ocean have a mix of convergent and transform plate boundaries.
Europe and Asia have edges that are not ALL on plate boundaries.
Australia is in the middle of the Australian-Indian plate. Antarctica has its own plate, but the actual continent doesn't get near the plate boundary. It's plate is called, oddly enough, the Antarctic plate. Who would have figured? You could say that Africa's edges aren't on plate boundaries, but there are some places in northern Africa that get pretty close to being on a boundary.
The volume of a cube whose edges are 4.5 inch long is: 91.13 cubic inches.
An inscribed polygon
Polygonal.
The two continents whose territory is crossed by the equator are Africa, Asia, and South America.
A centimetre cubed is the volume of a cube whose edges are 1 cm each. That volume is also know as a millilitre.A centimetre cubed is the volume of a cube whose edges are 1 cm each. That volume is also know as a millilitre.A centimetre cubed is the volume of a cube whose edges are 1 cm each. That volume is also know as a millilitre.A centimetre cubed is the volume of a cube whose edges are 1 cm each. That volume is also know as a millilitre.
Inscribed polygon, since it is inside the circle.