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  1. Air on the surface is pulled towards the poles, forming the warm south-westerly winds in the northern hemisphere and north-westerly winds in the southern hemisphere. These winds pick up...

  2. Oct 3, 2024 · Revision notes on Sub-Aerial Processes for the AQA A Level Geography syllabus, written by the Geography experts at Save My Exams.

  3. Oct 19, 2023 · The atmosphere is the layer of air that stretches above the lithosphere. The Earth’s water—on the surface, in the ground, and in the air—makes up the hydrosphere. Since life exists on the ground, in the air, and in the water, the biosphere overlaps all these spheres.

  4. Jan 11, 2016 · John T. Bowen's chapter on the economic geography of air transport is a comprehensive essay that addresses such themes as the evolution of the hub-and-spoke system, the emergence of low-cost carriers (LCCs), and the greater importance through time of leisure travel and its regional variability.

    • Michael S. Yoder
    • 2016
  5. Feb 1, 2019 · Transportation is the movement of material across the Earth's surface by water, wind, ice or gravity. It includes the physical processes of traction (dragging), suspension (being carried) and saltation (bouncing) and the chemical process of solution.

    • Andrew Alden
  6. Physical geography focuses on geography as a form of earth science. It tends to emphasize the main physical parts of the earth – the lithosphere (surface layer), the atmosphere (air), the hydrosphere (water), and the biosphere (living organisms)—and the relationships between these parts.

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  8. The Geography of Airline Networks. Theoretically, air transport enjoys greater freedom of route choice than most other modes. Airline routes span oceans, the highest mountain chains, the most forbidding deserts, and other physical barriers to surface transport.

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