One of her horse-riding pals, a veterinarian named Mary Wright, had the answer: alginate. Mary told Diane that alginate was a pink gummy material used to make molds of teeth. If it was safe for pets, it should be safe for a tiger. And people, too, Diane thought.
At her lab she mixed the alginate powder with water to form a paste. Standing in front of a mirror, she scooped up a blob and spread it on her tongue. She pressed it down with her fingers to get out any air bubbles. Not bad, she thought. Tastes just like spearmint. She decided to make an extra-thick mold to make it easier to peel off. So, she added another gloopy blob – and another.
–Bone Detective: The Story of Forensic Anthropologist Diane France,
Lorraine Jean Hopping
Read this passage. What do the descriptions, actions, and quotations tell you about the subject?
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Answer:
ᴋɪꜱʜᴀɴɢᴀɴᴊ ᴊᴀᴄᴋᴏ ᴩᴀꜱꜱʙᴏᴏᴋ ʟᴩ
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answer is in attachment
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