Monday, October 26, 2009

Supporting Answer!

http://fayette.k12.in.us/~page/Portfolio/Danielle/results.htm

Thursday, October 22, 2009

(con) how volconoes affect people who live near them.




The harmful smoke might lead to global warming. this affects us, because its hurting the earth and the earth gives us oxygen that we need to live and thats what global warming is taking away from us.

(Con) how volconoes affect people who live near them

the lava kills fish in lakes so, this affects the food chain. With the food chain being broken, it will eventually get down to the humans and it will affect us.

Con: How volconoes affect people who live near them!




Every time a volcano erupts people around the the volcano could lose family and friends, houses, possessions and lives. They either have to move away to another part of the world, or stay at the safe zones were the volcano is less likely to hit them.

Friday, October 16, 2009

(Con and Pro)how volcanoes affect people who live near them (lava )

http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20081108102108AA3CnBd

The lava emerged from volcano and spread around is rich in Fe and Mg which becomes land fertile to crops. So the people always come back after the disaster.

Volcano doesn't advert. It suddenly starts eruption. Lava flattens and burns everything along it passes. Ashes can reach far away from the volcano, covering the area at all. Gases from the eruption are too toxic and danger to the atmosphere. Great eruptions can provoke climate changing all over the world by means of ashes and gases.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

OUR BIG RESERCH ?

how do volconoes affect people who live around them?

El Misty






El Misty is a beautiful cone-shaped volcano in southern Peru. It lies in the Western Cordillera. This mountain is 19,101 feet (5,822 meters) high. It is one of hundreds of volcanoes in the Cordillera. But none of the others surpasses it in beauty and symmetry. El Misti was of great religious significance to the ancient Inca. It figures in many Peruvian legends. The cone, snowcapped most of the year, furnishes water used to irrigate fields. Harvard University established an observatory near the summit of El Misti. (In Peru)