Tsunamis very often destroy everything on their path: you can see it if you look at pictures of land after tsunami, where everything has been wiped from this area: buildings, streets cars and plants.
This depends on the strength of the tsunami and of the structural strength of the buildings: some of them and withstand the force of the tsunami.
They followed the way / cultures of the natives
Answer:
Foreign employment does help to life the standard and living conditions for the people of a country. It reduces the unemployment problems in a country but it is not at all a permanent solution for the development of a country.
Foreign employment allows people to offer their services in other countries which could be of extremely beneficial for one's own countries. The ideas and plans which people have cannot b utilized and hence, the country does not develop.
Answer:
Read Below
Explanation:
Question: The U.S Constitution required that the treaty be ratified by the U.S Senate under the Cherokee Constitution treaties had to be approved by the Cherokee national council. Did this occur with the treaty of 1835?
Answer: Negotiated in 1835 by a minority party of Cherokees, challenged by the majority of the Cherokee people and their elected government, the Treaty of New Echota was used by the United States to justify the forced removal of the Cherokees from their homelands along what became known as the Trail of Tears. In 1819 the remaining Cherokees who opposed removal negotiated still another treaty. So, yes it did occur in 1835.
Do you think U.S government has the right to enforce this treaty?
Another 130 years would pass before another president of the United States personally delivered a treaty to the Senate. On July 10, 1919, President Woodrow Wilson asked for a quick consent to the Treaty of Versailles. The Senate approved the treaty for ratification on October 20, 1803.
Hopes this Helps :D
Mark me as Brainiest Please : )

<u>Magma</u> and <u>lava</u> are the same thing, just a different word. Lava is magma that is above the <u>surface</u> of the <u>volcano.</u>