<span>Norris, one of the superintendents, made the Yellowstone roads, roads, built one of the park headquarters at Mammoth Hot Springs, hired the first “gamekeeper,” and campaigned against hunters and people who tried to destroy the park.. Much of the primitive road system he laid out remains as the Grand Loop Road. Through constant exploration, Norris also added immensely to geographical knowledge of the park.
</span><span> Nathaniel P. Langford, another superintendent was a member of the Washburn Expedition and advocate of the Yellowstone National Park Act, was made a volunteer who greatly helped the park.</span><span> He entered the park at least twice during five years in office—was in the 1872 Hayden Expedition and to evict a squatter in 1874. Langford did everything he could without laws to protect wildlife and other natural features, and without money to build basic structures and hire law enforcement rangers.
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Answer:
The choice of a frozen landscape has two important interpretations:
- It is meant as a symbolic representation of the feelings of loneliness of the monster the doctor creates, and perhaps the doctor's aswell. The monster feels alienated and longs for love, but all he knows is cold rejection. His life is limited by strong boundaries (like ice) that he can only avoid.
- It is a symbol of the consequences of the pursuit of knowledge. The path of knowledge can also be associated with the North Pole landscape, since the extreme conditions resemble the doctor's extreme, life threatening- sientific curiosity. In the book the doctor is lost, his life may be in danger and he is alone, deprived from the warmth of company. The extreme conditions of the North Pole could mirror these feelings/experiences.
Typically in the introduction paragraph, the first sentence in the essay is the topic sentence.
that love makes people more willing to change and face obstacles