Explanation:
<h2>It's time to make a layout.</h2><h2>Insert a new map. ...</h2><h2>Choose an appropriate coordinate system. ...</h2><h2>Add the key map to your layout.</h2><h2>Size and scale it in the same way you did above for the main map. ...</h2><h2>Add the minimal possible data needed to explain to the map reader where in the world they are looking at.</h2><h2>Symbolize and label as needed.</h2>
Corporations are often accused of despoiling the environment in their quest for profit. Free enterprise is supposedly incompatible with environmental preservation so that government regulation is required.
Such thinking is the basis for current proposals to expand environmental regulation greatly. So many new controls have been proposed and enacted that the late economic journalist Warren Brookes once forecast that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) could well become "the most powerful government agency on earth, involved in massive levels of economic, social, scientific, and political spending and interference.
But if the profit motive is the primary cause of pollution, one would not expect to find much pollution in socialist countries, such as the former Soviet Union, China, and in the former Communist countries of Eastern and Central Europe. That is, in theory. In reality, exactly the opposite is true: The socialist world suffers from the worst pollution on earth. Could it be that free enterprise is not so incompatible with environmental protection after all?
Answer:
I believe that it is a dormant volcano, I hope this answer helps.
C is the answer for this question