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In some coasts there’s water but almost no usable oxygen, forcing life to flee. Excess nutrients trigger algal blooms, then decay consumes oxygen and the area goes quiet.
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Kısaca
In some coasts there’s water but almost no usable oxygen, forcing life to flee. Excess nutrients trigger algal blooms, then decay consumes oxygen and the area goes quiet.
Contrary to popular belief, the Great Wall is too thin to be seen from space with the naked eye.
We picture sand, but deserts are defined by rainfall. Antarctica gets so little precipitation it’s technically a vast desert—its snow cover simply hides the fact.
Time zones look like straight lines on maps, but they’re often jagged. Clock choice can shift for economy, neighbor alignment, or identity—set by decisions as much as by sun.
Sun warms the surface by day; at night the surface loses heat by radiating it into space. Clouds, humidity, and wind change this ‘heat escape,’ making some nights biting and others mild.
A riverbed isn’t as fixed as it looks. When rains swell flow, sand and gravel move; bends shift, and a river can abandon an old path and carve a new one.
On a historical timescale, the Sahara was green and wetter “yesterday.” As rainfall patterns shifted, lakes shrank—leaving not just sand, but a massive climate story.
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