The feelings of the indigenous people tend to vary a lot about this topic.
Some of the indigenous people are very hostile to any foreigners in their land, so they would not hesitate to attack, and even in some cases kill.
There are some that feel it as an usurpation of their daily lives, and do not see the tourists very fondly, but are not making any real problems, just avoiding contact.
And there are some indigenous people that actually saw a nice opportunity to modernize and make a profit of the tourists, so they are using their survival skills in the wild in their advantage, and they are very welcoming towards the tourists and encourage them to come.
I’d say C.
A doesn’t make sense, they definitely could’ve domesticated animals in that time.
B doesn’t make sense either, they could’ve easily seen smoke signals, the sky wasn’t filled with them often.
C is just a weird answer. I doubt they were “passive observers” but probably the best answer to the question.
D doesn’t add up because they definitely needed agriculture/food surpluses. They were always hunting, they obviously ran out of food rather quickly.
So C is the answer.
Answer:
Valleys, canyons, oases, plains, and sand dunes
Explanation:
I looked up the answer, also I don't know if this is what you're asking but here you go
The answer is B. folding, uplift, and erosion. certain mountains are created from the folding of the upper layers of earth's crust. valleys on the other hand are made from the erosion of land or soil. tectonic uplift of the earths crust is also responsible for creating mountains.