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This is an international organization created by the U.S. and its allies in 1949 to prevent attacks by the Soviet Union.
2. NATO
This is an international organization created following World War II to provide a way to negotiate disputes.
5. United Nations
This was the delivery of supplies in a German city to circumvent the Soviet Blockade
8. Berlin Airlift
This line of latitude separates communist North Korea and the U.S. backed Republic of Korea.
4. 38th Parallel
This was the acronym for political talks between the United States and the USSR regarding nuclear weapons.
7. SALT
This is the belief that if one country fell to communism, other countries around it were likely to fall to communism as well.
3. Domino Theory?
This was a symbol of the Cold War that separated the East and the West; communist and non-communist part of a German city.
1. Berlin Wall
This said that the United States would aid any nation in resisting the growing threat of communism and became a guide for American foreign policy during the Cold War.
6. Truman Doctrine?
Answer:Public reaction to the book was a major factor in the passage of the 1907 Meat Inspection Act, which established a system of meat inspection that endured for nearly a century. In July 1996, the federal government announced new rules requiring more scientifically advanced methods of meat inspection
Explanation:
c
It would be the "Social Security Act" that was not a Great Society program, since this Act was actually implemented under the presidency of FDR, during the Second New Deal.
Answer:
Elephant Seals are not endangered. They are actually doing very well. According to the IUCN Red List, both species are considered to be Least Concern. The Southern Elephant Seal population is stable, the number of Northern Elephant Seals is even increasing.
Explanation:
The Southern Elephant Seal always has been safe, but there was a point in history that the Northern Elephant Seal was very close to extinction. In the 19th century, sealers regularly raided elephant seal rookeries for their blubber, which was used to make oil. Elephant seals are huge, but clumsy at land and make an easy prey, especially since they live in large colonies, which make them easy to find. By the 1890s, only one colony of 100 animals (some say it was even as low as 20 animals) was known on an island off the coast of Mexico.
But they recovered. In 2010, the population was estimated to be between 210,000 and 239,000 animals. They have recolonized offshore islands off the coast of California and Baja California, even started rookeries on the mainland. Pups have been born as far north as British Columbia.
Least Concern doesn’t mean completely free of risk. The population wen through what is called a ‘genetic bottleneck’. When the world population dropped to 20–100 individuals, the Northern Elephant Seal lost a lot of its genetic diversity. All the current animals are descendents of that very small group that survived the 19th century. That means that all living Northern Elephant Seals are closely related to each other, which makes the species very vulnerable to disease outbreaks. But as of yet, the species is considered to be safe.