Answer: 1. Fall Down
Explanation: In one world I've developed, the local surface gravity is slightly more than three times the surface gravity on Earth. Humans settled this world and were doing quite well through highly advanced technology. A series of disasters removed that technology and even the knowledge of that technology. More than 800 Earth-years later, civilization has started to regain a semblance of Western civilization on Earth.
Gravity introduces a lot of stress on structures and, with a gravitational factor like my world, may be the primary motivator in design. While I generally gloss over the specifics of cities and structures, I would like to know the following:
1. What are the best (known) building materials for a high-gravity environment?
2. What are the best architectural constructs for a high-gravity environment? (e.g., arches, peaked or flat roofs)
3. Considering the safety concerns and additional stressors, is ornamentation a viable feature for structures in a high-gravity environment?
Answer:
Cross-hatching technique
Explanation:
The portrait seems to be done in the pencil using the <u>cross-hatched technique. </u>
<u>It is the variation of the hatching technique which uses lines positioned at different angles to produce different tones, textures, and illusions of depth. </u>The lines can meet at any angle, but the simplest one is at 90°. The darker shadows and tones can be created also by the thickness of the line, the spacing between them, or adding layers.
Answer:
They are diffrent image types.
Explanation:
JPEG is known as being low quailty and RAW is another Image Type
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
It seems that your question is incomplete.
Indeed, there is no question here, just a sentence.
What is your question? What do you want to know?
However, trying to help you we did some deep research and found a similar question that provides the name of animals and you have to write the sound these animals make.
If that is the case, we can say the following:
Duck- cuac.
Cat- miau.
Frog- croac.
Dog- guaf.
Rooster- kikiriki.
Cow- muuuu.
Onomatopeia is a word that is formed from a sound.
Argentinan author Quino created the character of Mafalda in 1964. He wrote a series of comics strips in which Mafalda lives everyday life issues that can be compared to international issues that affect people all over the world.