C.
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Based on the 1925 serum run to Nome
Describe what made the terrain around Nome perilous? How did this contribute to the heroism of the dog teams?
Answer:
Located in the Alaskan tundra, the route to Nome crossed a 5000-foot mountain peak and the unstable ice of Norton Sound, ill-famed for breaking under pressure. Furthermore, the sea was frozen for seven months during the winter, meaning that dog sleds were the only way of transportation at the time. In addition to that, the “Great Race of Mercy” happened in the middle of a great storm.
Explanation:
All of these elements made the five days journey to get the serum required to save Nome (which should have taken a month) that much more heroic.
Answer:
His work is manly topographical focused in the accuracy portrayal of places
Explanation:
Joseph Mallord William Turner was an 18th century artist known for his paintings that focused on and perfectly portray what he saw. He made oil paintings and also watercolor paintings. Recognized for the painting "Fishermen at Sea" which was critically acclaimed at the time as something of a brilliant mind. His life was private and he was unsociable and a bit eccentric, those are characteristics of an artist ahead of his time, he could archive deeds of much older masters.