Answer:
A. The Bronx squirrels that eat nearly all of the trees' acorn in the New York Botanical Garden.
Explanation:
<em>The City Without Us </em>is a chapter of the book <em>The World Without Us</em> written by American journalist Alan Weisman. It tells about what would happen to the natural and built environment if humans suddenly disappeared.
<em>The City Without Us</em> gives us an image of what New York would look like without humans. Some of the details are presented in the options you were given.
It's expected that wild animals, wolves included, would enter the city if there were no humans. That's how nature works.
Money is a concept invented by the man, and it has no meaning if humans don't exist. It has nothing to do with nature.
The ocean is a large force and it's one of the obvious proofs of how powerful nature is. In the story, though, it has not yet broken the levees around New York City.
What remains are the squirrels. No one would think that squirrels could do something major. Without anyone or anything controlling their population, though, they could eat nearly every acorn in the New York Botanical Garden, thus preventing them from growing into new oaks. That way they would reduce the oak tree population in New York. They show that nature is even more powerful than it appears.
Answer:
Amazed
Explanation:
Garnet was amazed at what they had found!
Answer:
This book deals mainly with the rise of Coriolanus Snow from being a poverty-stricken mentor to a peacekeeper and eventually as a Gamemaker in the Capitol.
Explanation:
Suzzane Collins' "The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes" is a prequel or backstory of the famous "Hunger Games" trilogy. The Hunger Games is a dystopian world where the people are classed and divide into districts and made to 'volunteer' or 'offer' two persons from each district to participate at the annual Hunger Games that is to form the entertainment of the ones living in the Capitol and the winner districts are awarded food and other supplies.
This prelude is more about Coriolanus Snow who would become Panem's dictatorial president at the time of Katniss Everdeen and the Hunger Games. This book focus on the early days of Panem and how the Hunger Games came to be. It follows the story of Snow who was tasked with mentoring Lucy Gray Baird, a "tribute" from District 12. With plans to rise above the poverty of his family, Snow has aims to be an official at the Capitol and gain access to the 'wealthy' part of the society.
After cheating and winning the Games through the help of her mentor Snow, Lucy and some people from District 12 decided to escape north and live away from the control of Capitol. But along the process, he was also involved and even agreed to accompany them in the escape plan but his plans of making it into Capitol as an officer looked more pleasing to him and he went to the Capitol to work under Dr. Gaul as a peacekeeper and was admitted to the Academy. At the <u>end of the novel, we see Snow implementing many of his ideas into the future Hunger Games and also becoming the Gamemaker.
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Answer:A) they empathize cultural diversity
Explanation: