Answer:
Car on the highways require a good driver.
Liquids are usually less dense than solids but more dense than air. Temperature can change a liquid's density. For example, increasing the temperature of water causes the molecules to spread farther apart. The farther apart the molecules are, the less dense the water is.
Answer:
<u>Because of the nature of the items</u>
Explanation:
It seems <em>illogical </em>to conclude that the government would able to accurately track down deadly meat out of a pool of several tons of processed meat.
However, to determine defective toys or other non-meat products from stores would require little technical issues, whereas to examine meatpacking companies may require gathering expert dieticians to determine what meat should be categorized as "deadly meat", etc.
<span> </span><span>The Arizona-Sonora Border:
Line, Region, Magnet, and Filter</span><span>.<span> . . Belonging truly to neither nation, it serves as a kind of cultural buffer zone for both, cultivating its own culture and traditions. Like other borders, it both attracts and repels. Like them, it is both barrier and filter. It is above all a stimulating cultural environment. . . .</span>--James S. Griffith
The Arizona Sonora border was established as a result of the Gadsden Purchase of 1853. It runs through desert and mountain country, from the western Chihuahuan Desert by New Mexico through a zone of grassland and oak-covered hills to the classic Sonoran Desert west of Nogales. The land gets more and more arid as one travels west, and the western third of the border is essentially devoid of human habitation. It is this stretch of the border, once a major road to the Colorado River, that has earned and kept the title El Camino del Diablo, "The Devil's Highway."</span>
Answer:
Ancient Egypt
Explanation:
The ancient Egyptians were the early civilization to practise the tradition of gift-giving and exchanging. Egyptians became the first to have exchange gifts among nations. The Egyptians provided their neighbours, the Hittites with stone jars inscribed with the royal monogram. Neighbours and people of Egypt given gifts to Pharaohs and royalty all at the time included jewellery, crops, clothes, etc.