The question is about the short story "A Matter of Fact" by Rudyard Kipling, an English journalist and writer.
In a radio version the story can start with sea waves sound, and we can expect introduction of the characters sailing together. The story mainly have 3 characters and all 3 are journalists.
They are sailing from South Africa to England, and due to unexpected currents due to a volcanic eruption. Here we can hear the flaming sounds of a volcano eruption and rough sea that is causing a difficulty for the pilot to steer.
Then we will hear sounds of the sea monster that appears from the ocean bed and is screaming in pain as the monster is wounded and all 3 journalists look at the monster astonishingly and their surprised voice can be heard. The sea monster then falls back in the ocean bed, having heavy voices of pain and then the sound of monster falling in the sea, that will be a bit loud and powerful.
The journalists then discuss how they will represent this scene to the public and all 3 have some mixed views that can be heard in their voice and native accents.
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Answer:
Wheels
Explanation:
A lot of things use wheels and are made from them today, help with construction, transportation, etc.
Answer:
The reasons for this are likely because:
- Peru was a poorer country at the time.
- The Peruvian people didn't have access to clean/filtered water.
Explanation:
(I'm not sure, but I hope that helps.)
<span> </span><span>The Arizona-Sonora Border:
Line, Region, Magnet, and Filter</span><span>.<span> . . Belonging truly to neither nation, it serves as a kind of cultural buffer zone for both, cultivating its own culture and traditions. Like other borders, it both attracts and repels. Like them, it is both barrier and filter. It is above all a stimulating cultural environment. . . .</span>--James S. Griffith
The Arizona Sonora border was established as a result of the Gadsden Purchase of 1853. It runs through desert and mountain country, from the western Chihuahuan Desert by New Mexico through a zone of grassland and oak-covered hills to the classic Sonoran Desert west of Nogales. The land gets more and more arid as one travels west, and the western third of the border is essentially devoid of human habitation. It is this stretch of the border, once a major road to the Colorado River, that has earned and kept the title El Camino del Diablo, "The Devil's Highway."</span>