There are many ways in which pollen grains are scattered, and here are some of them:
1. wind - as the wind blows, it carries pollen grains throughout the planet, and thus new plants are created
2. insects - mostly bees take these pollen grains from one plant and transfer it to another
True.
The doctrine of stare decisis involves the deciding of
subsequent cases involving similar legal principles and facts in reference to
similar earlier cases. As a result, a court cannot overturn its own precedents
unless there compelling reasons to do so. Also, decisions of higher courts are
binding on lower courts
<span>In the scenario in which Joel who
is displeased with his son's lifestyle choices and, instead of dividing
his estate and wants to leave all of his property to his daughter, Marie, when he dies, Joel </span>may disinherit his son for any reason as long as Joel indicates in the will that the son was
omitted on purpose.
Answer:
The answer is the items at the end of the list.
Explanation:
The student in the example is more likely to remember the items at the end of the list, due to a phenomenon called the recency effect: we will remember best the most recent information. At the same time, this is related to the serial-position effect, which states that the order of the items in a list influences the way we remember them. More specifically, <u>we remember items at the end and the beginning more easily</u>.
The correct answer is the second one: Georgia’s contributions to World War I were military facilities, textile mills, arsenal of weapons.
Between 1917 and 1918, Georgia hosted the largest amount of military training camps in the United States. Thus, the state provided more than 100,000 men and women to the war. The military facilities also provided a large arsenal of weapons and other military supplies. Additionally, Georgia’s Southern Textile Mills helped in providing material for clothing during the war.