Environmental Sciences, asked by martensivy00, 9 months ago

Can you explain how layers that form in ice are similar to tree rings for me?

Answers

Answered by ggpradeep2020
66

Answer:

Layers of ice and tree rings are similar in that they can both record or store data from past environmental conditions. The study of tree rings is known as dendrochronology and it involves counting and studying individual rings in the tree. Each ring represents a year or specific growing period. If the ring is smaller it means there might have been a drought or nutrients were low. A larger than average ring would represent an unusually favourable growing season. Layers of ice in an ice sheet trap information that can tell about past conditions such as climate. Just like the tree rings specific sections represent a specific period of time. Air bubbles trapped in ice provides information on past climates.

Answered by ritikmaurya97sl
0

Answer:

Ice sheets and tree rings are similar in that they can record or store data from past environmental conditions.

Explanation:

  1. Ice sheets and tree rings are similar in that they can record or store data from past environmental conditions. The layers of ice in the ice sheet capture information that can tell us about past conditions, such as climate. Like annual rings, they represent specific sections of a certain period of time.
  2. Trees that are strongly dependent on temperature during the growing season will have narrow rings during cold seasons and wider rings during warm seasons. Trees that are highly moisture dependent during the growing season will have wider rings during the wet season and narrower rings during the dry season.
  3. Since trees are sensitive to local climatic conditions such as rainfall and temperature, they provide scientists with some information about the local climate of the area. past.
  4. For example, tree rings usually widen in warm, wet years and thin out in cold, dry years. It is an accurate and reliable dating method with many uses in environmental studies, archeology and everything in between. The method has gone from strength to strength and is now an essential method across many disciplines.

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