1a. It is not valid to say that basketball is more popular than football at the school because the poll was taken at a basketball game, where mostly, basketball fans are at.
1b. A better method to get a valid conclusion would be to take the poll during lunch or during a break, that way you can get answers from a good variety of students, where you can get basketball and football fans.
2a. City A: 4
City B: 4
2b. City A: 0.8
City B: 0.8
2c. City A: 3.75
City B: 5.25
3a. Howler Monkey mean: 17
Howler Monkey MAD: 0.75
Spider Monkey mean: 14
Spider Monkey MAD: 0.9375
3c. The howler monkey is on average heavier than the spider monkey. This is because the mean is higher and the MAD is lower. The MAD is the measure of by how much the values in the data set are likely to differ from their mean.
Answer:
Explanation:
Everyone probably doesn’t feel the same way as I do, but perhaps they should. While being in nature leads to better health, creativity, and even kindness, there may be something special about being among trees.
After all, trees are important to our lives in many ways. The most obvious is their role in producing the oxygen we breathe and sequestering carbon dioxide to help protect our atmosphere; but science suggests trees provide other important benefits, too.
Here are some of the more provocative findings from recent research on how trees increase human well-being.
Trees help us feel less stressed and more restored
Probably the most well-researched benefit of nature exposure is that it seems to help decrease our stress, rumination, and anxiety. And much of that research has been conducted in forests.
In one recent study, 585 young adult Japanese participants reported on their moods after walking for 15 minutes, either in an urban setting or in a forest. The forests and urban centers were in 52 different locations around the country, and about a dozen participants walked in each area. In all cases, the participants walking in a forest experienced less anxiety, hostility, fatigue, confusion, and depressive symptoms, and more vigor, compared to walking in an urban setting. The results were even stronger for people who were more anxious to begin with.
Even though it is a little bit complicated to distinguish the different options, these are the answers:
1. Oliver Cromwell was Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland from 1653 until his death (1658).
2. King Charles I was executed by Puritans in January 1649, since he rejected the demand of the English Parliament for the establishment of a constitutional monarchy.
3. The Commonwealth of England was created after the end of the Second Civil War and the execution of Charles I, in 1649, and it lasted until 1660. During that time, England, Wales, Ireland, and Scotland were ruled as a republic.
4. Theaters in London closed between 1642 and 1660.
5. The office of the Lord Protector was created in 1653.
6. The English Civil Wars (there were three of them in this period) took place between 1642 and 1651. The First Civil War took place between 1642 and 1646. It was a conflict between supporters of the monarchy of Charles I and those who rejected it.
It isn't certain, but since the strap was usually made of goat-skin, it could have been a symbol of fertility. By striking the women (often on the wrists) with it, it was said to ensure fertility, easy childbirth, and good health for them.