Edward Tolman's is the correct answer.
Edward Tolman was an American psychologist and a famous professor who made contributions to the Psychology studies. Through a serie of researches with rats, Edward Tolman was able to develop the Latent Learning in both animals and humans. He argued that people are constantly learning even when they don't make great effort to it. When we drive or walk the same route home everyday, we learn the location of different buildings, places, and objects. If, for some reason, we're unable of taking the route we're used to take, we will have no problem finding a different one to get home.
Answer:
I just think everyone should be left in America, and no boards should be kept up. Scientifically no one is a 100% american, If you dated about everyone a thousand years back everyone traveld from another country, so technically If all immigrants had to go back to were they came from, no one would be left in Anerica(it would be deserted)
I literally asked my history teacher this today
idk if this is graded for ur homework, but I wouldnt trust me
Answer:
The Eastern Desert served as an important mineral resource for the ancient Egyptians. Limestone, sandstone, granite, amethyst, copper and gold were among the stones and metals mined from the desert, and the remnants of thousands of quarries, camps and roads are scattered through the region's mountains and wadis.