Explanation:
Long before the need for sustainable development became widely recognised, the late Shaikh Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nahyan was achieving an environmental miracle: he was transforming the desert into a green haven.
Hamdi Tammam, in his book Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nahyan: The Leader and the March, wrote that the former president devoted much of his time making enquiries about the topography of the region.
After much research, Shaikh Zayed discovered that 15,000 years ago, the Arabian Peninsula was a very different place. Enveloped in thick forests and full of greenery, the land got transformed to a desert only after it was exposed to a long spell of drought that also forced its inhabitants to move in search of water. In time, the forests were buried and gradually transformed into the region's black gold or oil.
Shaikh Zayed charted a course to return the desert to its greener origins by increasing the number of trees, farms and palm orchards.
Answer:
the brown bear (<em>ursus arctos</em>) also known as "brown bear" has at least 16 subspecies recognized by Wilson & Reader (2005) of which at least 5 are considered extinct. These plantigrades are currently considered in danger of extinction and from the phylogenetic point of view, they have been attributed to have a polyphylogenetic origin or polyphyletic lineage, which means the sequence of arrangements of species from ancestors to the descendant through evolution.
Explanation:
Genomic analysis using different statistical methods showed that the genetic flow is not limited to pairs of closely related species. There is a high flow of ancestral genes between the Asian black bear and the ancestors of the polar bear, the brown bear and the American black bear, which explains the difficulties encountered in reconstructing the phylogeny of the bears and that, up to now, lead to the conclusion of its polyphyletic linage.
I believe the answer is: <span>Expansion of the blind window
In this context, blind window represents the things that other people could percieve on the individuals which the individuals cannot.
In the text above, only Olivia's mentors and peers see the potential that resided in her, and she's still hasn't got into the stage where she fully realized it.</span>
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
In this question, what is asked is to compare the plagiarism of the student version compared to this original version form the author.
The original version is the one that appears in this question. The version of the student is the following:
"Teachers don't often provide feedback anonymously, but the ability to provide feedback anonymously may create a context where the rationale associated with specific suggestions can be more safely explored (Howard, Barrett, & Frick, 2010). However, we cannot assume that all anonymous online spaces will serve as safe social spaces."
We have three options in this question: A) word-for-word plagiarism. B) paraphrasing plagiarism. C) this is no plagiarism. So, by the way, the student's answer was written, we can assume that there is no plagiarism.
Answer: social cognitive theory.
Explanation:
Albert Bandura’s social cognitive theory of gender role development and functioning affirms that gender roles are learned through observation and imitation. Rewards, which can be simple actions such as Karen being praised for playing with dolls, and punishments encourage the acceptance of gender-appropriate and gender-inappropriate conduct.