Which is not a disadvantage of the use of solar energy?
A; less energy produced on cloudy days
B; potential impact on bird populations
Please its for my test :(

Answers

Answer 1

Explanation:

I don't get exactly what you mean but let me say something. solar energy is usually less provided when it's cloudy but it usually won't affect the birds population


Related Questions

How is congress relevant to your life ?

Answers

Answer:

Through legislative debate and compromise, the U.S. Congress makes laws that influence our daily lives. It holds hearings to inform the legislative process, conducts investigations to oversee the executive branch, and serves as the voice of the people and the states in the federal government.

What fraction of Senators are up for election every 2 years?

Answers

Answer:

one-third

Explanation:

the answer is one-third because many of the senators have already served six years in the senate

who made the fishing pole?

Answers

Answer:

John Torrance invented the fishing pole. He was in the railroad industry in the 1930s and ran steamboats on the St. Lawrence River. He was also a director of the Bank of Montreal and closely involved with many things to do with the invention of the fishing pole.

Explanation:

John Torrance was the person who made the fishing pole.

Which most accurately describes events in the life of explorer Sir Walter Raleigh?

O Raleigh was the first European explorer to navigate the coast of present-day California.

O Raleigh led four voyages to the Americas from Spain, exploring the Caribbean islands.

O Raleigh led major expeditions to America, including the ill-fated Roanoke Colony.

O Raleigh is best known for establishing the colony of New Mexico for Spain.

Answers

The second one is the correct answer.

All of the following are examples of print media except:

Answers

Answer:

im afraid your question isnt complety finished.. what are the examples they gave you?

Explanation:

What were the general behaviors of the conquistadors toward the Native Americans they encountered?

Select the two correct answers.

They robbed and killed the Native Americans.
They paid the Native Americans for their labor.
They made deals to share the land with the Native Americans.
They thought it was their duty to convert Native Americans to Christianity.

Answers

Answer:

B C

Explanation:

what are 3 fun interesting facts about women in world war 1

Answers

Answer:

1. Women took on new roles in the work force, notably in war production and agriculture.

2. In 1914, the German armaments producer Krupp employed almost no women.

3. By 1917, women made up nearly 30 percent of its 175,000 workers and a nationwide total of nearly 1.4 million German women were employed in the war labor force.

Explanation:

Answer:

they where only useful for cooking, cleaning, and they brung men supplies for war.

Explanation:

what is the message of this political cartoon ?

Answers

Answer:

President Theodore Roosevelt, former Assistant Secretary of the Navy, was a staunch supporter of a strong navy. Roosevelt instituted a new policy known as Corollary of the Monroe Doctrine during his term. The Monroe Doctrine was designed keep Europeans out of the Americas, but the Roosevelt Corollary placed the United States as the chief and guardian of the Americas. Control of the seas was an important part of that doctrine, a control made possible because industrialization had sped up process of making battleships. Political cartoons in 19th Century often depicted America as a woman, Columbia. Here she is depicted in full war regalia. During the Spanish-American War, many cartoons began to depict the United States as a man, Uncle Sam

how much I know

Nêu những thành tựu về khoa học tự nhiên xã hội văn học thế kỉ XIX -XX? Cần trả lời gấp!!! T-T

Answers

Answer:

As we move into the new millennium it is becoming increasingly clear that the biomedical sciences are entering the most exciting phase of their development. Paradoxically, medical practice is also passing through a phase of increasing uncertainty, in both industrial and developing countries. Industrial countries have not been able to solve the problem of the spiraling costs of health care resulting from technological development, public expectations, and—in particular—the rapidly increasing size of their elderly populations. The people of many developing countries are still living in dire poverty with dysfunctional health care systems and extremely limited access to basic medical care.

Against this complex background, this chapter examines the role of science and technology for disease control in the past and present and assesses the potential of the remarkable developments in the basic biomedical sciences for global health care.

Go to:

Medicine Before the 20th Century

From the earliest documentary evidence surviving from the ancient civilizations of Babylonia, China, Egypt, and India, it is clear that longevity, disease, and death are among humanity's oldest preoccupations. From ancient times to the Renaissance, knowledge of the living world changed little, the distinction between animate and inanimate objects was blurred, and speculations about living things were based on prevailing ideas about the nature of matter.

Advances in science and philosophy throughout the 16th and 17th centuries led to equally momentous changes in medical sciences. The elegant anatomical dissections of Andreas Vesalius swept away centuries of misconceptions about the relationship between structure and function of the human body; the work of Isaac Newton, Robert Boyle, and Robert Hooke disposed of the basic Aristotelian elements of earth, air, fire, and water; and Hooke, through his development of the microscope, showed a hitherto invisible world to explore. In 1628, William Harvey described the circulation of the blood, a discovery that, because it was based on careful experiments and measurement, signaled the beginnings of modern scientific medicine.

After steady progress during the 18th century, the biological and medical sciences began to advance at a remarkable rate during the 19th century, which saw the genuine beginnings of modern scientific medicine. Charles Darwin changed the whole course of biological thinking, and Gregor Mendel laid the ground for the new science of genetics, which was used later to describe how Darwinian evolution came about. Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch founded modern microbiology, and Claude Bernard and his followers enunciated the seminal principle of the constancy of the internal environment of the body, a notion that profoundly influenced the development of physiology and biochemistry. With the birth of cell theory, modern pathology was established. These advances in the biological sciences were accompanied by practical developments at the bedside, including the invention of the stethoscope and an instrument for measuring blood pressure, the first use of x-rays, the development of anesthesia, and early attempts at the classification of psychiatric disease as well as a more humane approach to its management. The early development of the use of statistics for analyzing data obtained in medical practice also occurred in the 19th century, and the slow evolution of public health and preventive medicine began.

Significant advances in public health occurred on both sides of the Atlantic. After the cholera epidemics of the mid 19th century, public health boards were established in many European and American cities. The Public Health Act, passed in the United Kingdom in 1848, provided for the improvement of streets, construction of drains and sewers, collection of refuse, and procurement of clean domestic water supplies. Equally important, the first attempts were made to record basic health statistics. For example, the first recorded figures for the United States showed that life expectancy at birth for those who lived in Massachusetts in 1870 was 43 years; the number of deaths per 1,000 live births in the same population was 188. At the same time, because it was becoming increasingly clear that communicable diseases were greatly depleting the workforce required to generate the potential rewards of colonization, considerable efforts were channeled into controlling infectious diseases, particularly hookworm and malaria, in many countries under colonial domination.

Explanation:

What foreign policy issues arose in the nation's early years?

Answers

Answer:

Piracy and its answer a standing Navy was an issue as was the forced impressment of merchant seamen by the British. The cost was a huge issue due to the lack of taxing authority of the early congress.

Egypt is depicted on this map by what letter?

Answers

what map add the picture so we can answer it

Did the United States need laws restricting immigration in the nineteenth century? List three kinds of restrictions or beliefs actually imposed and state whether you agree with them or not.

Answers

Yes no the home honey honey

Which situation best illustrates the principle of the rule of law?

Answers

Answer:

you didnt provide any options?

Explanation:

You are the leader of a band of hunter gatherers. You have seen other bands settle in river valleys and begin to farm. Write a 5-7 sentence speech to persuade your own band to settle and begin farming.

Answers

Answer: Look at them. They’ve already settled down and began farming. What are we doing still standing here! We should be allowed to prosper and thrive. Let’s all work together to make our home a better area. Whos with me!

Explanation:

Please help I’m having trouble ;/

What are some similarities between Christopher Columbus and Leif Erickson
1-4 paragraphs

Answers

Answer:

Others, however, will opt for Oct. 9 to celebrate something else: Leif Erikson Day, a celebration of the Viking explorer credited with reaching the continent around the year 1000, nearly 500 years before Columbus did.

But, while it may sound only fair to share the credit for exploration, the movement to recognize Erikson also has a dark back story, as Leif Erikson Day’s history is connected to nativist backlash against immigration to the United States. At one point, for some people, the debate over who really “discovered” America came down to one question: who was whiter?

But interest in that history really spiked after the publication of the provocatively titled 1874 book America Not Discovered By Columbus by Rasmus B. Anderson, the founder of the Scandinavian studies program at the University of Wisconsin.

Anderson’s account detailed “the first expedition to New England” in the year 1000 and described Leif Erikson as “the first pale-faced man” and “first white man who turned the bow of his ship towards the west for the purpose of finding America.” He claimed American democracy descended from Norsemen’s system of government, of “free people” whose “rulers were elected by the people in convention assembled.” Furthermore, he made a case that Americans whose ancestors came from the U.K. actually had Viking blood too, due to earlier Norse invasions of Britain. Anderson also claimed that Leif Erikson’s brother Thorvald was slaughtered by the indigenous people and buried with two crosses, and that his “skeleton in armor” was later uncovered in Massachusetts.

He ginned up this story to make it seem as if the Vikings had been the victims of Native American violence, argues JoAnne Mancini, author of the 2002 journal article “Discovering Viking America.” This alternate discovery narrative could serve as “a salve to Americans’ and particularly New Englanders’ increasingly guilty conscience about the treatment of Native Americans” in the late 19th century, and a way for “Scandinavian newcomers to the West” to feel better about their own personal “complicity in the brutal conquest of Indian lands.”

Anderson’s book initially wasn’t well-known outside of academia, but would become better known to a mass audience when he was one of the passengers aboard a replica of a Viking ship that sailed from Norway to Chicago in a publicity stunt at the 1893 World’s Fair — also known as the World’s Columbian Exposition — in a stunt meant to distract attention from the festivities marking the 400th anniversary of Columbus’ arrival. The ship’s “welcome to the U.S. was so lavishly staged by the Norwegian Society of Brooklyn that six of her crew, including Captain Magnus Anderssen, ended up in Brooklyn’s Butler Street police court charged with being drunk and disorderly,” as TIME later recapped the event in 1950.

Explanation:

trust me

which governmental ententie approves of the appointment of supreme court justice

Answers

Answer:

Appointments are made directly by the President, but with the consent of the Commission on Appointments of the Legislature (by virtue of Article VIII, Sec. 5)

2. What is the purpose of Yellow Journalism?

Answers

Explanation:

Yellow journalism was a style of newspaper reporting that emphasized sensationalism over facts. During its heyday in the late 19th century it was one of many factors that helped push the United States and Spain into war in Cuba and the Philippines, leading to the acquisition of overseas territory by the United States.

foreign affairs
Why was America hesitant at first to get involved in

Answers

Answer:

Why was America hesitant at first to get involved in foreign affairs? The us had been a colony and some Americans feared more involvement would risk having to fight more wars

Explanation: i no it

What conflict might arise between U.S. expansionists and Native American tribes in the west?

Answers

Answer:

The Indian Wars were a protracted series of conflicts between Native American Indians and white settlers over land and natural resources in the West.

Which action represents an individual exercising a constitutional right?

a.
Summary judgement


b.
Quartering soldiers


c.
Civil disobedience


d.
Double jeopardy

Answers

Answer:

i think is answer A, am not sure but i think is that one

Explanation:

List 5 community events that Germany has in the year 1920/1930s.

Answers

Answer:

Kristallnacht is the only one i could think of

Explanation:

Someone pls help me I will make you you brain

Answers

Answer:

C.

Explanation:

what does inviolably means as it is used in the context of article 13

Answers

Answer:

i think it's without exception

Explanation:

if wrong pls forgive me

hope it helps

mark me brainliest pls

In no more than 50 words, give a brief history of theater.

Answers

Answer:

Despite theatre's resemblance to the performance of ritual activities, and the relationship that theatre shares with ritual, there is no evidence in any shape or form to show that theatre originated from ritual. This similarity of theatre to ritual is negatively attested by Aristotle, who in his Poetics defined theatre.  

Hope it helps!

What type of government gives absolute power to a small group or one individual?

Group of answer choices

republic

democracy

dictatorship

theocracy

Answers

Answer: .

Dictatorship

Explanation:

Dictatorship. Power in a dictatorship is held by a single person (or a very small group) that wields complete and absolute authority over a government and population.

Laws are created to ensure that citizens...
A. get the best tax rates every year
B. do not hurt people or property
C. protect only the state's natural resources
D. get a good education

Answers

b. do not hurt people or property!

8. What did it take to be a citizen in Sparta?

Answers

Answer: obliged to undergo military training as prescribed by law, as well as participate in, and contribute financially to, one of the syssitia.

Explanation:

Answer:

Citizenship

Explanation:

The spartan education process known as the agoge was essential for full citizenship. However, usually the only boys eligible for the agoge was Spartiates,those who could trace their ancestry to the original inhabitants of the city. Those were two exceptioms

Who won the capture of savannah?

Answers

Answer:

the capture/ seige of savanna was won by the british

Answer:

On December 29, 1778, British Lieutenant Colonel Archibald Campbell and his force of between 2,500 and 3,600 troops, which included the 71st Highland regiment, New York Loyalists, and Hessian mercenaries, launch a surprise attack on American forces defending Savannah, Georgia.

Explanation:

Who invented paper and the magnetic compass, who traded them, and what was their impact on the world?

Answers

Answer:

;

Explanation:

paper and the magnetic compass were inveted by the ancient china. the magnetic compass was traded on to the Arabs in the Islamic Empire.  Paper was invented in China during the 3rd century B.C., and its use spread via the Silk Road. it was one of the most-traded items between the east and west. Demand for paper has led to some serious effects on the environment. Paper mills also represent significant sources of water and air pollution, releasing multiple greenhouse gases into the environment and discharging toxic bleach byproducts into the water table. The magnetic compass was an important advance in navigation because it allowed mariners to determine their direction even if clouds obscured their usual astronomical cues such as the North Star. Compasses made it possible for explorers to sail far out into oceans and away from land—no matter what the weather was like. This led to more exploration, the discovery of new countries, and trade with other cultures.

sorry for my spelling and caps but have a nice day and hope it helped.

Wyeast and Klickitat grew jealous of each other and soon began to quarrel. They became so angry that they fought. Their people also took up the quarrel, so that there was much fighting on both sides of the river. Many warriors were killed.


This time the Great Spirit was made angry by the wickedness of the people. He broke down the Bridge of the Gods, the sign of peace between the two tribes, and its rocks fell into the river. He changed the two chiefs into mountains. Some say that they continued to quarrel over Loo-wit even after they were mountain peaks. They caused sheets of flame to burst forth, and they hurled hot rocks at each other. Not thrown far enough, many fell into the river and blocked it. That is why the Columbia is very narrow and the water very swift at The Dalles.


–"The Bridge of the Gods,"

Ella E. Clark


According to this legend, why did the Great Spirit take down the Bridge of the Gods?


to punish the Plateau

Answers

Short Answer: He was angered by the wickedness of his people; they were battling, quarreling, and dying, and his action was to both demonstrate his power and to end the fighting.

He was angered by the sinfulness of his people; they were battling, wrangling, and dying, and his action was to both protest his power and end the fighting.

What is protest?

Protest is a public expression of objection, disapproval, or resistance towards an idea or action, typically a political one. Protests can be thought of as acts of group action in which many people cooperate by attending, and sharing the potential costs and risks of doing so. Protesters may organize a protest as a way of publicly making their judgments heard.

This time the Great Spirit was made angry by the wickedness of the people. He was angered by the sinfulness of his people; they were battling, wrangling, and dying, and his action was to both protest his power and end the fighting.

Therefore, his action was to both protest his power and end the fighting.

Learn more about the protest here:

https://brainly.com/question/28722228

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