Answer: If Yellowstone National Park, for example, were not federally protected, the canyon would surely be home to a logging community that would cut into valuable old-growth timber. In fact, according to an article in the Seattle Times from 1903 discussing what soon became Yellowstone National Park's boundaries--"A commercial promoter had surveyed them and planned a private railroad right-of-way along John D. Rockefeller Jr.'s land on its east side."
Only 12% of all land areas in the western United States is public property with federal protection status. These lands include national parks and monuments like Yosemite and Mt. McKinley Wilderness where exploration is often restricted or off limits because these regions are so fragile or valuable to wildlife that they need our help to secure it.
**ANSWER MADE BY AN AI**
Say!!!
Lol hope this helps :D
The answer would be the last choice
the tip is you have to read the answer choices very carefully!
Answer:
which question is it !???
Answer: from her words on the poem " what high and mighty
hypocrites!
They claim
I’m the foul one!" She sees them as pretenders who act like they have feelings or virtues which they certainly don't have.
She also sees the God and goddess as hard-headed, and too proud to learn but she shows care and concern which the Gods do not posses, from the line "a little care and concern, but the gods are hardheaded;
they never learn."