Let's break this down.
Scientifically speaking:
<span>An organic object is an object that contains carbonAll living things, whether they are plants or animals, contain carbon<span>The term organic is often used to mean "natural" because of its association with living things, the term also applies to things that have never been alive.</span></span>Examples are: gasoline, plastics, synthetic fabrics, pesticides and fertilizers. These products are manufactured from natural gas and oil, which are the remains of plants and animals that died millions of years ago.
Organic compounds will burn.
Inorganic objects:
<span>do not contain carbonthey are substances that are not and never were alive</span>Examples: Metals, minerals, pure water and clean air are examples of inorganic substances,
<span>Inorganic substances will not burn.</span>
Answer:
Topical organization.
Explanation:
As the exercise presents, the pattern chosen to organize is called "topical organization". This is a commonly used format, and works like this: it arranges information according to different sub-topics under a larger one. For example, following the content of the example, a topical organization would look like this:
Modern symphony orchestra:
*Strings
(Information about strings)
*Woodwinds
(information about woodwinds)
And so on with the rest of the instruments.