A good example would be increased levels of oxygen in a pond due to fertilizer sediments in a lake. The pond is not part of the farm but sediments from the fertilizer have flowed from a lake to the pond that led to high levels of oxygen which did not come from the environment but from farming.
sediment accumulation in a lake near a farm (B) on e2020
b. cannot be influenced by inaccurate assumptions
c. promotes limitations in perceptions
d. can be misrepresented
In the question "All of the following are limitations of statistics except that it" cannot be influenced by inaccurate assumptions. Statistics provides limited information, promotes limitations in perceptions and can be misrepresented are all limitations of statistics.
Explanation:
If sufficient care is not employed in collecting, analyzing and interpreting the data, statistical results sway be misleading. Only a person who has an proficient knowledge of statistics can handle statistical data efficiently. Some mistakes are possible in statistical conclusions.
Answer choices are :
A- Constantine appeased foreign invaders by giving them land, while Diocletian went on the offensive to stop the attacks.
B- Constantine divided the empire into western and eastern halves, while Diocletian further split the country into four regions.
C- Constantine divided the empire and shared emperor duties, while Diocletian reunited the empire and served as sole ruler.
D- Constantine reunited the empire and served as sole ruler, while Diocletian divided the empire and shared emperor duties.
Correct answer choice is :
D) Constantine reunited the empire and served as sole ruler, while Diocletian divided the empire and shared emperor duties.
Explanation:
Constantine established regulatory, economic, social, and military changes to sustain the empire. He restructured the government, dividing civil and military rights. To fight extension he launched the solidus, a new gold coin that became the standard for Byzantine and European currencies for more than a thousand years. Diocletian divided and expanded the empire's civil and military services and organized the empire's provincial divisions, building the largest and most bureaucratic government in the chronicle of the empire. He set new regulatory centers in Nicomedia, Mediolanum, Sirmium, and Trevorum, closer to the empire's frontiers than the legendary capital at Rome.