I'm pretty sure the answer is D because it seems like the most logical statement that could be made by an explorer.
Monet
<h3>Explanation</h3>
Impressionism was developed by Claude Monet and other Paris-based artists from the early 1860s. (Though the process of painting on the spot can be said to have been pioneered in Britain by John Constable in around 1813–17 through his desire to paint nature in a realistic way).
Answer:
forms with no projecting parts that could break
Explanation:
Egyptian statues and art in general were very strict in design. They had the right postures that did not express emotion or movement. They were realistic in body proportions, but the pharaohs were presented as larger than the common people. This way it could be determined who has a higher standing in society.
Egyptian art was present in the tombs as part of their elaborated death rituals. <u>Many of the sculptures presented there were reliefs or attacked to the background, and if they were freestanding they were done in the colossal fashion, so no part sticks out.</u> <u>Part of this was probably the fact that tomb raids were frequent and sculptures served the purpose to guide and benefit the deceased.</u><u> </u>Egyptians wanted them to preserve to help the person in the afterlife, so they made them as permanent as possible.
<span>The PLATO answer is C, in the order B,A,C.</span>
Until computers started to dominate science and technology in the early decades of the 20th century, virtually every measuring instrument was analog.
Many scientific instruments now measure things digitally (automatically showing readings on LCD displays) instead of using analog pointers and dials.
Hope this helps!!^^ plz mark brianliest?