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Amanda [17]
3 years ago
5

What is one benefit the works progress administration provided americans?

History
2 answers:
dedylja [7]3 years ago
8 0

it is new and improved highways

Elena-2011 [213]3 years ago
4 0
The Works Progress Administration was a government program created by Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1935. This program helped to employ millions of people over the course of its eight years of existence. This program benefited American society greatly, as it resulted in the development/fixing of schools, roads, and bridges all across the US. Along with helping the US infrastructure, this program also helped artists. FDR used these individuals to create murals/paintings for public parks.
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Its is a no human inhabitant because nobody lives there is no residents nor community on the land also <span>no permanent residents.</span>
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The history of the oxygen regulator
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Answer:

umm here are some facts about it!Hope this helps!

The first cylinders for storing oxygen were developed in 1868,5 which allowed its use in general anesthesia. By 1885, George Holtzapple used oxygen to manage a young patient with pneumonia, and established its role in acute care.

"The existence and properties of oxygen had been noted by many scientists before the announcement of its isolation by Priestley in 1774. Scheele had also succeeded in preparing oxygen from a number of substances, but the publication of his findings was delayed until after that of Priestley's. As a result, Priestley and Scheele are credited with the discovery of the element independently. The fact that the gas is a component of the atmosphere was finally and definitely established by Lavoisier a few years later. In 1929, W. F. Giaque and H. L. Johnston announced the discovery of two isotopes of oxygen, of mass numbers 17 and 18.

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. It is denser than air and only slightly soluble in water. A poor conductor of heat and electricity, oxygen supports combustion but does not burn. Normal atmospheric oxygen is a diatomic gas (O2) with a molecular weight of 31.9988. Ozone is a highly reactive triatomic (O3) allotrope of oxygen (see allotropy). When cooled below its boiling point oxygen becomes a pale blue liquid; when cooled still further the liquid solidifies, retaining its color. Oxygen is paramagnetic in its solid, liquid, and gaseous forms. Although eight isotopes of oxygen are known, atmospheric oxygen is a mixture of the three isotopes with mass numbers 16, 17, and 18.

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if you would like to know more here you go! This website helped me a lot!! https://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/oxygen+regulator

5 0
2 years ago
HELPPP Why did the Aztecs have to continuously repair or rebuild their temples and buildings?
irakobra [83]

Aztec Temples

Aztec temples were called, by the Mexica people of the empire, Teocalli - god houses.  The priests of the Aztec religion went to these temples to worship and pray, and make offerings to the gods to keep them strong and in balance.

Identifying the Aztec temples has been a tricky job at times.  It's been easy to simply assume that large, monumental structures such as pyramids are all either palaces or temples, but that may not be the case.  Still, we do have a good understanding of what happened in the religious areas and how the many of the buildings looked hundreds of years ago.

Often a whole area of a city would be dedicated to religious activities.  Some monuments would be made to specific gods.  Some were built for specific celebrations.  The buildings you probably associate with the Aztec religion are the great pyramids.  These were four sided, stable structures that can withstand the earthquakes that are common in the area.  These would have stairs up one side, and a flat top, often with a shrine on the top.  Let's take a look at some of the Aztec temples specifically:

Templo Mayor

Height: 60m/197ft

The gods: Huitzilopochtli and Tlaloc

Distinctives: A double temple

Completed: 1497

Materials: Built of stone and covered with stucco and polychrome paint

Templo Mayor was a part of the sacred area of the city of Tenochtitlan, now Mexico City. It was only one of perhaps 75-80 buildings which included other pyramids, ornamental walls, gathering places, shops and, of course, bathrooms. Since the city was build on swampy ground, the temples would often sink and needed to be repaired and built up over the years.

The temple itself was the main religious building of the capitol city, and it had two shrines on the top - one to Huitzilopochtli and one to Tlaloc. Huitzilopochtli (Hummingbird of the South) was the patron god of the Mexica people, the one who led them to Tenochtitlan in the first place. He was the god of the sun and war. Tlaloc was the god of rain and fertility. Both gods required constant human sacrifice. During the final phase of construction, thousands were sacrificed.

Many, many rituals were done at the temple - human sacrifice, of course, is the most well known. But there were many more, such as the private ritual blood-letting, burning of copal (a tree resin), and the music of worship. This Aztec temple represented the Hill of Coatepec, where the Mexicas believed Huitzilopochtli was born.

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