This is an environmental article told from the perspective of a polar bear. Aimed towards a specific audience, this passage is intended for an ignorant population of people who are hurting the environment. Attempting to provoke guilt by giving the perspective of a polar bear on becoming extinct, so that the readers will be inspired to change their ways that have injured the global ecosystem is the purpose of the article. The overall tone of the passage is sympathetic, depressing, judgmental, angry
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live in the world. Animals can be grouped in many different categories. Some categories could be things like where they live. For instance animals could be categorized, such as safari, jungle, and arctic. In the arctic, some animals that could be found there include narwhals, polar bear, arctic fox, snowy owl, and artic hare. Most animals from the artic have a warm coat of fur, which helps them survive in these harsh conditions. Narwhals are wale like creatures that have horns on their head
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found recycling would be fined. Recycling would become an obsolete term. Nobody wants to reuse plastic bottles it is so unsanitary. Let’s be grateful and praise global warming since it would contribute to our economic success and happiness. The arctic regions of North
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I will be explaining the difference between the Inuit, Iroquois, and Haida. Similarity: The Inuit and the Haida hunted (sea animals), but the Iroquois didn’t hunt. The Iroquois and the Haida both lived in a green grasslands , but the Inuit lived in a icy terrain with mounds of ice and snow. All of the tribes made clothing. The Haida and the Inuit made shirts and coats while the Iroquois made shoes out of leather. All the tribes used art to show tradition throughout their land. Inuit made tiny sculptures
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Eskimos) are a group of about 150,000 people who live in the Arctic tundra regions, mostly in Northern Canada, Siberia, Northern Alaska and Greenland. They are the indigenous people of the area. Their main language is Inuktitut and the word “Eskimo” meaning ‘eaters of raw meat’, originally quite offensive to inuits. They are also taught English, Danish, French or Russian at school. The Inuit’s descended from whale hunters who migrated to the Arctic regions but later turned to trapping animals when the European
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surviving in freezing temperatures and swimming in the Arctic, they must have some specific trait that they have adapted to over the years to keep their bodies warm and allow them to survive in such harsh conditions. Polar bears most likely evolved from brown bears that were isolated into this type of environment, and adapted over the years in order to survive. An evolutionary adaptation made by the polar bear, is their ability to swim in the Arctic Ocean without freezing. With time, the polar bears
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Imagine you are a polar bear, and you want to get to shore, but you can't because it's too long of a swim, because the ice caps at the shore have melted and the ice caps you are on our floating further and further away becauses of greenhouse gas effects on the environment. Therefore you can't get home, you can't get food, and you can't survive. The polar bear was added to the endangered animal list in 2008 because of multiple causes, most are from impacts caused by greenhouse gases. Greenhouse gases
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The animal that I chose for the endangered species project is a polar bear. These beautiful mammals have a pigment-free, transparent coat that is about 2.5 to 5 cm think. It is composed of a dense, protective undercoat that is covered with different lengths of guard hairs. The polar bear’s fur appears to be white, yellow, and sometimes brown, because each of the hair shafts, which cover its coat are un-pigment, transparent, and have a hollow core that reflects and scatters visible light. Also, underneath
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Management Intervention For Polar Bears The affect climate change has on polar bears has been a hot topic for the past 10-15 years, and for good reason. Global warming has been causing ice to melt at an alarming rate, from 1979 to 2009 the amount of perennial sea ice in the artic has declined at an average rate of 11.3% per a decade (Hunter). In 2008, Polar bears were even listed as a threatened species in the U.S. Endangered Species Act. This decrease in ice has caused a substantial decrease in
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Hopefully, by funding the efforts of scientists, educating the “non-believers” and suggesting ways to help restore the environment, we will come together to contribute to a solution to the endangerment of the animals in the Arctic. The presence of ice caps is an essential element in the lives of all polar bears and emperor penguins. They need these ice caps to raise their offspring, to hunt for food, to feed themselves and their families, but with the rise in temperatures,
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