Geography has an influence on the:
- natural resources, which can determine richness of a nation
- the contacts with other culture that it has.
For example, island nations can be more isolationist- then can defend themselves better and they have a limited contact with other nations.
Answer:
d. the person
Explanation:
The real psychological, and then societal and cultural, implication of one's death is the leave of the person and the vacancy they leave in the society's structure.
<u>Each person has it's own place in the structure of the family, neighborhood, job, etc. and with death, the rest must learn how to cope with their leave and continue without implications.</u>
It is also notable that the body in most of the cultures is just the symbol of the person, while the real person is connected to their social role, identity and behavior, which they fulfill and have while alive. This is why in many cultures the death of the brain is taken as the "real" and legal death - <u>only the leave of the person's identity, social role and function is really what the environment misses with one's death.</u>
Social stratification does not exist in band societies (among others) because: they do not want the system.
<h3>What is social stratification?</h3>
This can be defined as the system where the society is in stratas. By stratas, it means that there is a form of social class in the society.
In band societies, they have rejected the system of social stratification and adopted other systems.
Read more on social stratification here:
brainly.com/question/12245475
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The options are not included with this question. However, we can still try to understand which factors were considered when writing this sample response. In this response, the author takes into accout the type of rhetorical appeal that John Muir employed. He tells us that Muir used an appeal to logic (<em>logos</em>) when providing evidence about the destruction of trees. He also tells us that Muir used an appeal to credibility (<em>ethos</em>) by showing that he knows the history of individual trees. Finally, the author uses an appeal to emotion (<em>pathos</em>) by using emotional language.