C. figures aren't typically shown
Answer:
The two specific passages referred to in the question were not provided, but from other sources like the New Georgia Encyclopedia it seems that there is considerable negative effect from the paper mills and that more legislation and oversight is needed to assure that toxins and other by-products are disposed of properly.
Explanation:
The state of Georgia is the largest paper producer in the United States with more than twenty five paper mills operating statewide. They generate $20 billion in revenue for Georgia each year. The largest mills are located near the coast, in Augusta, Brunswick, and Savannah. Historically a dangerous and toxic by-product of papermaking was dioxin, but paper companies have been working to find alternative products to make the manufacturing of paper safer for surrounding communities and the environment. These air emissions often produce the unpleasant odor found in the vicinity of many mills. Additional industrial toxins generated by the papermaking process include mercury and there are many other toxins that is what makes a paper mill smell so strong to people passing by and living in the vicinity. The fishing industry in Georgia has suffered greatly from the by-product pollution caused by the paper mills.
1833 to select trainees for the indian civil service - the precursor to the british civil service. t - 9824913.
Answer:
The answer is below
Explanation:
Rudyard Kipling was a British journalist known for his work in poetry. In one of his poems titled "The White Man's Burden," he wrote the phrase "send forth the best you breed" where he was addressing the Europeans.
The reason he wants the Europeans to send out their "best breed" is to face the natives he described as " half devil and half child" to redeem them through cultural superiority or colonization.
Southern states wanted new slave territories, while the north wanted to contain the spread of slavery. while western expansion contributed to growing sectional tensions between the north and south from 1800-1820