Answer:
It sparks an important cultural tradition on the island.
Explanation:
Hoto Matua was the first settler to have been arrived on Easter Island. He was the first and the greatest king of Rapa Nui. it is said, that Hau Maka had a dream in which the spirit led him to an island as a new residence for his king.
After arriving at the land, the settlers began to spread across the land and sub-divide the land among themselves according to their clans.
<u>The decision of building a monument on the island by Hoto Matua suggests the beginning of important cultural traditions on the island</u>. The moai (statues) were carved to remember important ancestors. The culture remained there for nearly a thousand years.
Thus the correct answer is second option.
It wouldn't really change all that much because there are still numerous jobs that sustain the society that have to be done regardless of education. The only solution to this would be if everyone's high education made it possible to create machines or robots to do these jobs for us, but until that happens people would still have to do physical work that is done regardless of education. An example of this can be house building or agriculture or factory working or anything similar. Everyone having higher education would eventually help us speed up and make the processes easier to do, but still a part would have to be done manually.
Answer:
The thrust reverser can be important during difficult landing conditions, such as wet runways where wheel braking is not effective
Explanation:
Answer:
Examples and Statistics
Explanation:
The examples being 'they sign up to build a school for a gold star on their resume, but they have no real building skills and take jobs away from local construction workers' and 'they arrive to teach English but instead take selfies with the locals'. The statistics are the resources they've used to write this (ex. Schulten, Rolfe, Michaels, etc.) and the information they've drawn from it.
Answer:
i need help ur a college girl im a 8th grader
Explanation: really now no joke