History, asked by hjakers, 1 year ago

The geographical divide between the tidewater and the piedmont is called:

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Answered by Inflameroftheancient
4
HELLO FRIEND HERE IS YOUR ANSWER,,,,,


The geographical lane or The geographical divide between the tidewater and the piedmont is called \textbf{Fall Line}, in geographical term.


By the means of geography, a fall line is usually a imaginarly drawn line or a imaginable line stuffed into rivers which are parallel to each other at a fixed area or a precise point where the two meeting rivers are crashing into a approximated elevation for which they can be found as equal or at a same length.


Fall lines are conjointly formed under many points, elevation joints, elevation. regions, but they are found at the meeting point of tidewater and piedmont besides coastal and piedmont evenly highly valued by the people and ones who run specific businesses as, they might be usable for generating hydroelectric electricity by tidal power and high fan torque turbines thus, a huge advantage of the speeds by which the waterfalls generate energetic variations.


A fall line can also be regarded or said as a dead end or a ending point where no further vessels can move forward and decide their journey , so, many conquerors (in early 16th , 18th , 19th centuries) take it as a benefited tactic to stop the ships , usually the navy of a strong army getting stopped to their walking foot.


HOPE THIS HELPS YOU AND GIVES YOU A DETAILED VERSION OF A FALL LINE!!!!
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