#1: two wires were placed the wrong way.. Luckily they weren't the timer ones, or else the bomb would have blew up before they were at their destination
#2: fuel... During the flight and returning home, the crews had trouble transporting their extra fuel to their main fuel tank, which led to them running out of fuel very soon. (and yes... they were trying to fix the problem while dropping the bomb)
hope this helps :D
Answer:
Limitations of Maps
Perspective: To show us the information we see, maps trade off a lot of potentially useful information.
The Cartographer’s bias: A map tends reflect the reality it wants to show. As an example, for the longest time, the maps of both India and Pakistan showed both countries possess disputed territory.
The territory: One map rarely does justice to the territory.
Explanation:
please brianliest
The answer is
c.<span>helped egyptians study anatomy.
#For Penn Foster </span>
Answer:
Constructive.
Explanation:
When recalling or giving a narrative of an event or scene stored in memory, individuals may choose to give a constructive memory recall of the scenrio by choosing to give account of what actually transpired as stored in the person's memory. However, in a bid to exercise completeness or give a detailed account of what transpired, this may lead to use of the individual's general knowledge on other to pad the narrative. This is called constructive memory, this is different from reconstructive memory which is subject or personal or individual interpretation.