Answer:
"Fossils are physical evidence of preexisting organisms, either plant or animal. Fossils of any kind are useful in "reading the rock record," meaning they help us decipher the history of the earth. ... They can help us determine the geologic age and environment (the paleoenvironment) in which they were deposited."
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He and and family have more food to eat because of larger rice harvests each year.
1. national debt
2. spread of communism
3. President's political opposition
4. arms race
2. spread of communism
Explanation: The Truman Doctrine was request to the US Congress for assistance for Greece and Turkey (weapons, food, aid) in their on-going struggle against Communism within their nations. The Marshall plan was billions of dollars in US aid for the war revenged nations of Europe, following the Second World War. The intention of the Marshall plan was to provide an incentive for the nations of Europe to reject a move to communism and allow a stable transition to democratic governments
<span>Every technological and transport advance brings great benefits for human societies; but
at the same time, it can change the cultures it links, because contact
with other peoples allows human civilizations to permeate the concepts,
ideas, practices, religions and customs of other cultures. Thus,
with the advance of means of transportation, the cultures of the world
that were previously isolated, or almost isolated, could be affected
when they were mixed with ideas of other peoples. However,
culture has been greatly benefited by science and technology itself,
since it has knocked down myths, erroneous beliefs and harmful customs
for human beings from different regions of the world. Millions of human lives were saved by modern medicine, with the creation and transportation of new medicines; as well as the transportation of properly preserved food to the most remote regions. <span>Science
and technology certainly change world cultures, but connecting the most
remote peoples, even if it changes cultures, frees them from prejudice
and racism, while enriching them with new concepts and discoveries.</span></span>
<span>The Western tradition is indebted to Judeo-Christian formations
of the special dignity of human beings and the rights and responsibilities
which are theirs by virtue of that dignity. All human beings owe their lineage
to a set of common parents according to the Hebrew Bible. These parents, Adam
and Eve, were made in the image and likeness of their Creator (Gen. 1:27), and
thus all their progeny bear that image (i.e., the imago Dei). From these
beginnings we inherit the concept of human exceptionalism—the belief that human
beings are unique, possessors of inalienable rights, and ought to exercise
managerial stewardship over nature.</span>