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:
Extinction
Explanation:
Extinction, in psychology, actually refers to the gradual weakening of a conditioned response that results in the decrease or disappearance of behavior completely, which is the case here. In other words, it is how the conditioned behavior eventually stops.
Answer:
A common cultural heritage, including religion, language, and/or ancestry, that is shared by a group of individuals is called <u>ethnicity</u>.
Explanation:
Ethnicity or an ethnic group is defined by the state of belonging to a social group that has shared cultural traditions that can include religion, language and/or ancestry. These share factors make people identify with others as a part of a whole group that have the same interests, and that often come from the same or similar places. There are huge ethnic groups that comprise hundreds of millions of people, like Chinese communities, or in a larger scale, Asians. And there are also very small ethnic groups like a specific tribe of native Indians that can be as big as a dozen people.