They turned to the sea professions beacuse if you live near the sea and the desert its obvious that you should go towards the sea, to maintain a local economy and keep a population steady
Answer:
Foragers
Explanation:
The Neanderthals were a hominid species that was living in Eurasia and dominating the area until the migration of Homo sapiens to its territory. These hominids were foragers. Their lifestyle was based on hunting animals to survive, and often they moved along the animals they hunted as they were migration from one place to another. They were not practicing agriculture, or rarely spent longer period of time at one place as they were not going to be able to sustain themselves.
Answer:
b. The death toll from volcanic eruptions do not always correlate to exclusivity, and can be affected by human actions before and after the eruption.
Explanation:
Many volcanic eruptions don't kill anyone. This is because most active volcanoes are well-known to local residents, who give them appropriate respect.
Lahars are deadly, but so are pyroclastic flows, and releases of ash and/or poison gases. The two deadliest eruptions in recorded history caused death by starvation and tsunami.
The point of the paragraph was that the VEI was <em>not</em> directly related to the number of deaths.
Corporations are often accused of despoiling the environment in their quest for profit. Free enterprise is supposedly incompatible with environmental preservation so that government regulation is required.
Such thinking is the basis for current proposals to expand environmental regulation greatly. So many new controls have been proposed and enacted that the late economic journalist Warren Brookes once forecast that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) could well become "the most powerful government agency on earth, involved in massive levels of economic, social, scientific, and political spending and interference.
But if the profit motive is the primary cause of pollution, one would not expect to find much pollution in socialist countries, such as the former Soviet Union, China, and in the former Communist countries of Eastern and Central Europe. That is, in theory. In reality, exactly the opposite is true: The socialist world suffers from the worst pollution on earth. Could it be that free enterprise is not so incompatible with environmental protection after all?