1 and 3 are correct, this is due to the fact that modern technology is constantly growing and other developed nations are feeling threatened or inferior when another developed nation grows further ahead. National security has also grown global, just the threat of a foreign country developing nuclear capability is enough for another country to launch missle strikes or other acts in order to quell the threat of another nuclear capable country. 2 is not correct because industrial strategies are being shared throughout the world constantly and the safety of a country no longer stands by their standing army or navy, but by the threat of nuclear capability or a possibility of retaliation through explosive nature. Even today, most wars are done through the army holding down a line, and the navy/airforce launching long ranged missile attacks of various nature.
Hmm, maybe a 2 inch
within a 1-1 1/2-2 inch
ha, im trying to remember the page I studied for an electrical portion back in my shop class. hope this works!!
Answer:
1) Populations are majorly increasing in areas where shifting cultivation is practiced, causing there to be less area available for use of shifting cultivation.
2) Around the world, overall, there is much less unoccupied land that is able to be used for shifting cultivation.
This is AP Human Geography, right?
The following are the answers:
12. I once asked Red Cloud if he could recall having ever been afraid, and in reply he told me this story. He was about sixteen years old and had already been once or twice upon the warpath, when one fall his people were hunting in the Big Horn country, where they might expect trouble at any moment with the hostile Crows or Shoshones.
13. Red Cloud had followed a single buffalo bull into the Bad Lands and was out of sight and hearing of his companions. When he had brought down his game, he noted carefully every feature of his surroundings so that he might at once detect anything unusual, and tied his horse with a long lariat to the horn of the dead bison, while skinning and cutting up the meat so as to pack it to camp.
14. Every few minutes he paused in his work to scrutinize the landscape, for he had a feeling that danger was not far off.
Answer:
"Why we grow so much corn (about 87 million acres each year) is because we can. ... Anti-ethanol advocates also like to pick on corn. They thrust with a two pronged argument: that too much good food producing corn is being used for fuel, and that ethanol is driving up the cost of corn and, thus, food."
Explanation: