First of all, a <em>supply curve</em> is a chart in Economy that shows us the relation between Price and Quantity of a certain good or service. Several factors may cause this curve to shift to the left or right, e.g.: An increase of customers' purchase power, the decrease of the need for a certain product by the population, and so on...
a. Resource prices rise is another example, and would cause the supply curve to shift to the left. As with it, the final price of the products that depend on this given resource for their production, would rise, hence causing their buyers to purchase fewer quantities of them.
b. If a quota is placed on a good, it would also cause this good's final price to rise, hence causing the consumers to buy less, hence shifting the curve to the left as well.
<em>Note: </em>Of course, these are assuming that the goods in question are <em>non-essential </em>goods. That is, people may choose to buy less of them. In case of essential goods (like toilet paper, or electric power for example), people would still consume it regardless of changes in price! And in that case, the curve would stay still, or even shift slightly to the right, upon a price rise.
ANSWER:
sociocultural-graded influences
STEP-BY-STEP EXPLANATION:
when social and cultural factors affect an individual at a particular time and include such variable as ethnicity, social class, and subcultural membership, these factors are called sociocultural-graded influences
<span>During his reign, Akenaten made a very controversial change
in religion. He abolished the practice
of worshiping numerous deities and introduced the worship of one God called
Aten. He also moved the capital to Amara.
When he died his practice of one god disappeared and the old religious practices
were restored. Tutankhamun also
introduced the practice of worshipping one god Aton. This however angered the priests that led to
abandon his belief in one god.</span>
Islands form an arc when two oceanic plates converge (come together, approach) creating a row of islands above the overriding plate. The older, heaver plate gets forced below the lighter plate. That old plate heats up and descends into the lithosphere. The edge of that plate begins to melt as it gets deeper into the earth. The melting plate feeds magma chambers that supply volcanic islands that forms an arc <span>when the molten rock erupts onto the ocean floor of the overriding plate.</span>