Year 8 Displays

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Year 8 Key Words and Visuals N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Continents N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Equator N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Africa Country Continent N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Asia Five major regions: South East Asia East Asia Central Asia Western Central Asia South-west Asia N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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South East Asia: includes Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Malaysia, Singapore, the Republic of Indonesia, Brunei, and the Philippines. N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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East Asia: includes China, Tibet, Mongolia, North and South Korea, and Japan; South Asia, including India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Nepal, and Bhutan. N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Central Asia: Asian republics of the former Soviet Union including Siberia N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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South-west Asia: includes Afghanistan and the countries of the region called the Middle East—Iran, Iraq, Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia, and the other states of the Arabian Peninsula. N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Western Central Asia: includes the Caucasus. N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Countries of Asia Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan Bangladesh Bhutan Brunei Cambodia, China Georgia India, Indonesia, Republic of Iran, Iraq, Israel Japan, Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan Laos, Lebanon Malaysia, Republic of Mongolia, Myanmar N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Countries of Asia Nepal, North Korea Oman Pakistan, Republic of the Philippines Russia Saudi Arabia, Republic of Singapore, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Syria Taiwan, Tajikistan, Thailand, Turkey, Turkmenistan United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan Republic of Yemen N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Tectonic Plate Boundaries N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Earthquake (outside) N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Earthquake (outside) N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Earthquake (inside) N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Earthquake N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Earthquake N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Earthquake N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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An anticlinal fold N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Ravines and cliffs that mark the line of the mid-Atlantic fault in Iceland N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Mountains N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Weather Conditions in the atmosphere, especially in the layer near the ground. Features of weather include: temperature, humidity, sunshine, wind, cloud cover, and precipitation. N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Temperature Measuring hotness and coldness N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Climate Hot and Humid Rainforest and savanna Mild and Humid Mixed forest and grassland Cold and Humid Needle-leaf and mixed forest Dry Steppe and desert Polar and Alpine Tundra and Icecaps N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Climate Hot and Humid Rainforest and savanna Mild and Humid Mixed forest and grassland Cold and Humid Needle-leaf and mixed forest Dry Steppe and desert Polar and Alpine Tundra and Icecaps N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Rainfall N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Ocean The ocean is a huge body of salt water that covers about three-quarters of the Earth's surface N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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River N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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River N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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River N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Tributary N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Floodplain N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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River channel N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Meander N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Waterfall N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Confluence N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Flood N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Deposition N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Mouth N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Overland flow Infiltration Groundwater flow Transpiration N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Source N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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The water cycle N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Evaporation (water is heated by the sun) N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Convection (water rises into the air) N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Condensation (water forms into clouds) N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Transportation (winds push clouds until they encounter land) N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Precipitation (water falls as rain) N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Water Basins (water collects into streams and rivers) N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Coast N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Erosion N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Erosion N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Inland N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Population The total number of human inhabitants of an area, such as a city, country, or continent. N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Population Distribution Not many people Lots of people N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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London Capital City N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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More Economically Developed N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Less Economically Developed N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Tourism N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Brazil N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Rainforest N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Upper Canopy 30-50 meters Densest layer Lianas and Epiphytes Thinnest layer Forest floor Rainforest N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Canopy At the upper canopy level, the tops of trees reach heights of 30 to 50 m (100 to 160 ft). N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Emergents Emergents may tower to 60 m (200 ft); this layer is uneven, with breaks between treetops, allowing sunlight to filter through to the middle layer. N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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This middle layer, the thickest layer of the rainforest, includes another level of treetops, lianas (woody vines), and epiphytes (plants that survive on airborne nutrients). The middle layer is so thick that little sunlight reaches the forest floor; only 1 per cent of the light above the upper canopy gets through to the floor. The middle layer N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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The lowest layer is also the thinnest, sparsely populated with tiny seedlings and shoots. Each layer of flora houses its own faunal communities; many animals live in ecological niches at one layer and never venture beyond to other layers of the forest. Forest floor N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Buttress roots N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Ferns N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Slash and burn N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Cattle rancher N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Mining N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Conservation N.Bradley Haringey EMA

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Sustainable N.Bradley Haringey EMA