Answer:
A. to honor the gods
Explanation:
They built ziggurats tall so they could be nearer to the gods.
- Timbuktu, a trading city in central Mali, is still referred to as the most isolated remote location in the world.
- Timbuktu started as a summer encampment for nomadic tribes of the region.
- During World War II Timbuktu was used to house prisoners of war.
- Today Timbuktu is very, very poor.
- Both droughts and floods consistently threaten the city. Flooding happens because the city doesn’t have an adequate drainage system to keep rainwater from building up.
- The movement of salt from the mines in the middle of the Sahara desert through Timbuktu to the Niger River is what Timbuktu depends on for its survival.
- Rice is the predominant crop grown in the area.
- It is about 15 km north of the Niger River.
- In the 14th Century it became the commercial, religious and cultural center of the West African empires of Mali and Songhai.
- Timbuktu’s greatest contribution to Islam and world civilization was its scholarship. By the 14th Century important books were written and copied in Timbuktu.
Answer:
Help students avoid factors that hinder problem solving
Explanation:
By listing the many ways to use the large rubber band, students are able to grasp and understand the rubber band fully. In this way there many options that a person would consider when trying to get creative with problem solving that may involve the rubber. Since the student very different facets to the rubber, he/she is able to devise a loophole that may create a way to solve a problem using the rubber band.
True. The
ESSID/SSID broadcast option will be turned off at the WAP.