The offenses known to the police are a crime index, reported to the federal bureau investigation’s uniform crime reports, composed of crimes that are both reported and recorded by the police. In addition, a crime rate is a measure of the incidence of crime expressed as the number of crimes per unit of the population or other base, it is used because they are more comparable instead of total numbers.
Answer:b. Joe is a Type B personality
Explanation:
Type B personality individuals are more relaxed , easy going and tolerant .
They don't restrain themselves, if they get the opportunity to have fun they will grab it with both hands irrespective of how much work they may have to face afterwards.
Unlike type A personality individuals who are always worried about time due to their sense of urgency they don't see a need to be having fun when there is a lot of work that still need to be done and they stress a lot due to their aggressive nature .They always want to get ahead of everyone , life is a competition to them.
In the above text Joe leaves his work at work because he is a type B personality they treasure their relaxation time and always want to use it to the maximum.
They don't real take life as competition or see a need to get ahead of everyone which can be seen in non ambitious Joe above .
People with Type B personality tend to be more tolerant of others than Type A individuals because they are not competitors but they are more reflective, experience lower levels of anxiety and display a higher level of imagination and creativity.
I believe that once it is in the middle inner ear, it goes to the brain.
Hope this helps!
Modern humans started spreading from Africa to Europe, Asia, and Australia some 100,000 years ago – a process that took about 70,000 years. We also know that at some point in the past 25,000 years, a group managed to reach America from Siberia at the end of the last ice age.
However, exactly when this occurred and which route these early pioneers took has long been debated. Now new research based on ancient DNA and plant remains from lake deposits, published in Nature, is finally helping us to answer these questions.Lake sediments can help shed light on the plant and animal life of this period because the successive layers of sediment allow us to step back in time to reveal a history of past environments. The researchers recovered sediment cores dating back to almost 13,000 years ago from an area of the corridor which is thought to be the last to become ice-free. Identification of the pollen grains and small fragments of plants in sediments are important in revealing vegetation development.