The answer is: C. Not to try and fix them all, but also not participate in them
Thoreau just want people to know that evil exist and there we might not be able to eliminate them completely. By knowing this, we can always prepare ourselves to take care of evils when we need but not completely lose our mind over it. Simply by choosing not to participate is often enough because the more people do it, the less evil would exist in this world.
Your response may include these descriptions of Clay:
confident
brave
determined
young
strong
Seventeen-year-old Clay demonstrates these characteristics as he struggles several times trying to navigate the mountain but ultimately never gives up. When his attempt at zigzagging up and down the cliff fails, he nearly falls. However, he perseveres and decides to use his ax as a tool to help him gain a foothold as he climbs
The ancient Egyptians<span> believed that when someone </span>died<span>, their soul left their body. The soul would then return and be reunited with the body after it was buried. However, the soul needed to be able to find and recognise the body in order to live forever.</span>
<u>Answer:</u>
Deposition is a "conservative" while erosion is a "destructive" mechanism.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Deposition is when the surface is exposed to sediments, dirt, or rocks. It's the inverse of erosion. Deposition is a positive method since it builds or produces surface features. As over time wind, water and other forces will wear away sediments, so must sediments be accumulated as well. The process through which water vapor transforms spontaneously to ice in sub-freezing air, without first becoming a liquid is one of the instance of deposition.
In earth science, erosion is the activity of surface mechanisms that detach soil, rock, or soluble material from one place on the crust of the Earth, and then transferred it to another. For an instance wind carries away small pieces of rock from a mountain side.
<span>The first British Army could have come south from Canada along the Hudson River, while the second British Army in New York City could have come north up the Hudson River, meeting up somewhere in between.</span>