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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
6 pages in length. The importance of Daniel Quinn's "Ishmael" is that it addresses the very real possibility that humanity will destroy planet Earth. The wise and understanding ways of Ishmael help the reader understand more fully the drastic measures that must be taken right now – now tomorrow or next year – in order to save what is left of this planet. Looking at a particular environmental issue through Ishmael's eyes gives the student a greater realization of how bad things have become and how hard people must work to make them better again. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCIshml.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
fully the drastic measures that must be taken right now - now tomorrow or next year - in order to save what is left of this planet. Looking at
a particular environmental issue through Ishmaels eyes gives the student a greater realization of how bad things have become and how hard people must work to make them better again.
Of all the environmentally diverse life forms on this planet, the oceans coral reefs represent some of the most complicated. Made up
of a number of plant and aquatic life, coral reefs are "one of the riches and most complex ecosystems in the ocean" (Anonymous PG). Even though many people think
coral reefs are some sort of rock formation, they are actually made up of polyps, which are the skeletal remains of millions of the particular type of small animal.
Numbering well over two thousand, the various kinds of coral reefs exist in tropical settings, directly off the shore. The clear, shallow waters that support this ecosystem plays a
significant role in the overall expansion and survival of the reefs, because as they help to support the myriad plant and animal life that, themselves, survive because of the reefs.
"Reefs need to be managed place by place, and while each place is different, what is the same everywhere is that the people who depend upon, and will be
affected by, management must be actively engaged in all aspects of the process" (Hinrichsen 12). The food chain that is created by the existence of coral reef systems is both
simple and complex at the same time. Because the various animals that live within the reef rely upon one another for sustenance in relation to the food chain, coral
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