Anthropology is the science which studies the humans in society, also, the relations between this society and the environment. Modern anthropology is a discipline inside the anthropology. It tries to explain man through his social and cultural environment.
When anthropology as a discipline is applied to modern societies there is a factor that generates a problem, time. We don´t have enough historical resources to size the real impact of situations, for example, climatic problems.
In ancient civilizations studies, we employ a diachronic method so as we can measure the evolution and progress of cultural and natural events. In the case we study of modern civilizations, the consequences of different situations aren't quantifiable, so the conclusions we can get are partial.
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radiation-the action or process of radiating; especially : the process of giving off radiant energy in the form of waves or particles
degradation-a reduction in rank, dignity, or standing
removal from office loss of honor or reputation
wavelength-the distance (as from crest to crest) in the line of advance of a wave from any one point to the next corresponding point
Environmental hazards-An environmental hazard is a substance, state or event which has the potential to threaten the surrounding natural environment or adversely affect people's health, including pollution and natural disasters such as storms and earthquakes.
radioactivity-radioactive substances, or the radiation emitted by these
radon-the chemical element of atomic number 86, a rare radioactive gas belonging to the noble gas series
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The answer is E.
Domestic policies are issues that are administratively handled in a country. All of your other options regard foreign policy.
Answer: Mayor Willam Hartsfield was credited with developing Atlanta into the aviation powerhouse that it is today and with building its image as "the City Too Busy to Hate." Hartsfield helped establish Atlanta’s first airport, he was committed to advancing the goal of the city to become the aviation hub of the Southeast. While serving as a member of a subcommittee of the finance committee, he played a prominent role in the selection of Candler Speedway's 287 acres south of Atlanta near Hapeville for a landing field for airplanes. The city leased the Candler site in 1925. Hartsfield believed that Atlanta's future lay in air transportation and took the lead in promoting it throughout his political career.
His aim for promoting Atlanta as an aviation center earned him the certificate of distinguished achievement awarded from the chamber of commerce in 1928 and the reputation as Atlanta's "father of aviation."