In Congo’s sun-scorched and dusty south, thousands of miners scour underground tunnels hunting for cobalt. Many of them work by hand. That’s why they are known as creuseurs — French for diggers.
They don’t use power tools. They don’t wear face masks and often no gloves. They do it because they live in one of the poorest countries in the world, and cobalt is valuable. The mineral is essential for the lithium-ion batteries found in smartphones and many electric vehicles. Most of the world’s cobalt supply comes from the Congo region. These cobalt-laden chunks of rock leave the country destined for refineries in Europe and China, where they enter the complex supply chains of some of the largest technology and automotive firms.
Creuseurs know their work is physically dangerous. Death and injury from tunnel collapses are not uncommon. Children sometimes join their older brothers and fathers in the mines
Was that detail enough ??eh??
Btw the answer was from google
Using two chemicals and compounds as an example is when the 2 number points move around and move they switch and answer switched to so that means answer 2 is correct
Answer:
Air in the atmosphere acts as a fluid. The sun's radiation strikes the ground, this way warming the rocks. As the rock's temperature rises due to move from one place to another of heat by something touching something else, it then conducts to the rest of the earths surface, thus warming it up.
Explanation:
Its flat land in other words it easier to grow crops