<em>Basically the text is explaining that the way Americans level of skill made them unequaled to the rest of the world (mind, that is not a fact because there was a large share of well-working people in the world in this time) . Also it explains that American brain and ability to construct (why is this entire article just bragging about Americans being so much better when that's not 100% true?) was one of the most economic boosting things and they were very productive for that timeframe.</em>
<em>That's my best understanding of the article. (Scholastic really likes to brag about Americans, huh?)</em>
<em>-Northstar</em>
I think is true because I take a test about it
<span>World
War I (First World War or Great War o WWI) started on July 28, 1914 and ended
on November 11, 1918, was a war focused in Europe. The war divided two nations:
the Allies consisting of Russian Empire, France, Italy, Japan and United
Kingdom or British Empire against the Central powers consisting of Germany,
Ottoman Empire and Austria-Hungary. The war, introducing new military
technology weapons, had killed an estimation of nine million soldiers in
annihilation, bloodshed and massacre.</span>
Answer:
Sea-level rise will exacerbate the hazards posed by climate change (storms, waves, temperatures, precipitation, etc.) to infrastructure, freshwater supplies, agriculture, and habitats for threatened and endangered species on U.S. and U.S.-affiliated atoll islands.