B Block Human Geography - Work, work, work, work. One of your questions is:
Indicate some food taboos, along with the cultures that practice them, in the chart below. To help...
Your other questions:
- Consumption of large quantities of snack foods and alcoholic beverages are characteristic of popular culture. Explain how each of these food preferences are expressed regionally, according to culture.
- What foods do you avoid? Do you avoid foods because of taboos or for other reasons?
- Do your food preferences match the predominant ones in your region?
To help with the snack food question check out:
To help with the food of our region check out:
A Block Legal Studies - Today you have a Criminal Law Unit test. The test will cover chapters 4, 5, and 6 of the All About Law text (Introduction to Criminal Law; The Police - Investigation, Arrest, and Bringing the Accused to Trial; and Trial Procedures). The test will have: 20 True/False questions; 15 Multiple Choice questions; 15 Matching questions; and 4 Short Answer questions. I am certain that you will do extra well on this test. No lawyer works in isolation and today neither will you, you may not use notes, however, you may collaborate with colleagues on the test. You'll have as much time as you need for the test however it should only take 45-50 minutes to complete.
D/C Blocks Social and Environmental Sciences - In geography, arable land (from Latin arare, to plough) is a form of agricultural land use, meaning land that can be used for growing crops. Of the earth's 57 million square miles (148,000,000 km²) of land, approximately 12 million square miles (31,000,000 km²) are arable; however, arable land is being lost at the rate of over 100,000 km² (38,610 square miles) per year. Our soils support 95 percent of all food production, and by 2060, our soils will be asked to give us as much food as we have consumed in the last 500 years. They filter our water. They are one of our most cost-effective reservoirs for sequestering carbon. They are our foundation for biodiversity. And they are vibrantly alive, teeming with 10,000 pounds of biological life in every acre. Yet in the last 150 years, we’ve lost half of the basic building block that makes soil productive. The societal and environmental costs of soil loss and degradation in the United States alone are now estimated to be as high as $85 billion every single year. Like any relationship, our living soil needs our tenderness. It’s time we changed everything we thought we knew about soil.
So today, with Benton, you'll look at arable land
Countries With The Most Arable Land In The World
Earth has lost a third of arable land in past 40 years, scientists say
Our World In Data Land Use
Soil: The Foundation of Agriculture
With Young you'll have a handout to fill in on Agriculture dealing with Vegetative Planting, Seed Agriculture, Subsistence Farming Commercial Farming and 10 Agriculture Types or Regions
Much like BC which has a variety of agricultural practices in a variety of regions.
Today's Fit...




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