The problem of less land for raising a livestock and the environmental risk for raising insects for food.
<u>Explanation:</u>
To raise a livestock, the farming requires a large land for all the cattle to graze. However to the constant increase of human population and wiping out of agricultural land it is high possibility for a proper cattle farming.
Whereas for raising insects it does not require a large land. A small quantity of land is more than enough for the insects. But for the rate of extinction and endangering insects, only a few is capable for consuming. The insects should be qualified for consuming and from the risk of endangering.
Livestock do not of the issue of getting endangered as they are more in number and adaptable to climate change. It is an unbalanced situation in both ways.
Hnn hai par bhohut jald marne wali hu
Answer:
1 he had a major obsession with gold
2 he could eat anything his food would turn to gold
3 hes greedy,
4 nothing would bring him satisfaction until the world was his treasure room and filled
with gold
Deep beneath the ice of Antarctica, there lies a dark shape untouched by the eyes of man. No, it’s not an alien spaceship; it’s a subglacial lake first theorized by Russian scientists* and physically discovered in the 1990s. It’s the 4th or 6th largest lake in the world, depending on how you define what a lake is, and it’s completely covered by four kilometers of ice.
Because it’s in the middle of Antarctica – a place not known for balmy days – it’s impressive that the water is liquid at all. The most likely explanation is heat from geothermal vents, but there’s still a lot we don’t know about Vostok and other subglacial lakes.
What’s more, Vostok is very likely to contain life. We can’t say for certain yet, but the odds are getting better every day as scientists continue to look at the data. This would be an ecosystem completely cut off from the sun* for millions of years. It’s an environment not dissimilar to that of Europa. If life can exist in Vostok, why not on Jupiter’s frozen moon?
Story Uses
The potential for Vostok is as deep as the ice that covers it. As an ancient body of water hidden away from the eyes of humankind, it practically screams Lovecraftian Horror. Who knows what could be down there, waiting in the dark.
If eldritch monstrosities aren’t your thing, Vostok and other subglacial lakes could be the last viable sources of fresh water in a dystopian future.* The microbial life within it could hold the key to curing major diseases or, on the flip side, might cause entirely new ones.
There’s even a political aspect to explore. Right now, Russian scientists are using drilling methods that environmental groups say will contaminate the lake. The Russians deny it. Who wouldn’t want to read a story from the POV of a UN official who suddenly has to deal with a bunch of angry scientists?
Answer:
The lights were on the field and they were bright and lit up the stands.
Explanation:
:)