Answer:
Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo
Answer:
I mean, it’s a question but the bots would say “You can probably answer this question on your own”, and ban it!
Explanation:
Lol
D. the female figure of prostitute
Answer:
Explanation:
<u>A: keystone </u>
Keystone is also known as capstone, <u>and it is the stone at the highest point of the arch construction.</u> It is placed as the final piece to lock the construction not to fall, as it is distributing the weight of the arch.
<u>B: voussoir</u>
<u>Voussoir is the name of the whole arched part,</u> including keystone and <u>impost</u>. It is the complete curved element, and the blocks included are most usually made out of stone.
<u>C: impost </u>
The impost is the name for the block that lies at the end of the column, a<u>nd it is also used for the block that is the start of the arch-shaped element</u> of the arch. It is the base of the voussoir.
<span>All Native American tribes used natural pigments; the very concept of chemical pigments had not even been invented yet when Indians still roamed free. And all tribes created hand shaped pottery because they had no access to machinery to do it for them.
Southwest tribes include: Apache, Comanche, Havasupai, Hopi, Jemez, Kiowa, Lipan, Maricopa, Mohave, Navaho, Paiute, Papago, Panamint, Pecos, Pima, Pueblo, Shoshoni, Soaipuri, Tewa, Ute, Walapai, Yavapai, Yuma and Zuni
While all of them produced hand shaped pottery decorated with natural pigments, most did so for their own use within the tribe. The first and perhaps most famous of the tribes to trade heavily in pottery were the Maricopa. Others soon followed the Maricopa example such as the Navaho which became even more famous for their jewelry than their pottery.</span>