What is the importance of the season cycle???
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Seasons have an enormous influence on vegetation and plant growth. Winter typically has cold weather, little daylight, and limited plant growth. In spring, plants sprout, tree leaves unfurl, and flowers blossom. Summer is the warmest time of the year and has the most daylight, so plants grow quickly.
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- The thickness of the earth's atmosphere is approximately 430 miles. We wouldn't be able to survive if this layer of gases didn't protect us.
- During the day, the heat would sear us, and at night, we would be freezing.
- The majority of the atmosphere is made up of a thin layer of gases that is both quiet and stable.
- However, the lowest 7 miles—where humans live and breathe—contains all of the weather we encounter, as well as gases, water, and dust.
- The heat from the sun keeps the bottom 7 miles whirling and churning as the land and water underneath it warm.
- Everything we call weather—from mild showers to ferocious storms and tornadoes—is caused by the ceaseless churning of this lowest layer, referred known as the troposphere.
- The influence of the earth's rotation and the way the sun's heat is dispersed have resulted in a distinct pattern of wind circulation on the planet.
- Because of the photographs that can now be taken from satellites orbiting the planet, viewing these cycles and patterns has become simpler.
- The typhoons that originate in the China Sea and affect Southeast Asia, the hurricanes that originate in the Caribbean and affect the southeastern United States and Central America, and the tornadoes that travel across the American midwest are all caused by these worldwide patterns.
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