Hello. This question is incomplete. The full question is:
Carefully examine this photograph of a home bomb shelter. Fearing a nuclear attack, many people put these in their homes during the 1950s. What kinds of things did this homeowner think to include?
Answer:
Food, water, flashlights, batteries and some furniture that could promote minimal comfort.
Explanation:
In the 1950s, fearing possible nuclear attacks, many people invested in building bomb shelters in their homes. This would guarantee the family's survival if a bomb threat was real. However, it took more than the shelter to guarantee survival and for that reason, it was common for people to put survival items inside shelters like food, water, lanterns, batteries and some things that could guarantee a minimum of comfort such as beds, chairs , reading material, games, among others.
Answer:
1) a
2)not sure but i think its d
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options attached, we can comment on the following.
The fossil discovered in the 1950s that reinforced the hypothesis that Africa was the birthplace of humanity was the "Australopithecus Africanus."
At the end of the 1940s, beginning of the 1950s, renowned archeologists John T Robinson and Robert Broom excavated the Sterkfontein Caves in South Africa and discovered a 2.3 million-year-old fossil they called "Mrs. Ples," or the Australopithecus Africanus.
Anthropologists consider that South Africa is the cradle of humanity. They think that the first hominids appeared there and they spread to other regions of the earth. The oldest one of the hominids was the Australopithecus and it is considered to have appeared on earth approximately five million years ago. The latest form of hominids, the H*mo Sapiens -you and I- appeared approximately 200,000 years ago.
<span>C. Illyria
It is where </span><span>Shakespeare's</span> play the twelfth night takes place