Math, asked by chetan11103, 1 year ago

silk road class 11 hornbill
summary plz its urgent

Answers

Answered by maryamkincsem
1

Answer:

The author chronicles the challenges and hardships he looked in the Silk Road regions as they are presently. The peruser finds it refreshing to traverse such vast tracts of physical topography, expanses of the normal world that remain to a great extent untamed.  

As an exchange route, the Silk Road has been less a single interstate and more a system of overland routes connecting Europe with Asia, making exchange possible between those with a passion for silk, horses and fascinating fauna and vegetation. Just about each transaction conceivable has happened along its numerous trails throughout the centuries.  

Middleton's specific passion consists of exposing himself to nature's vicissitudes like confronting oxygen starvation in Tibet as he climbs towards the "navel of the universe," and different hardships amid the voyage.  

The author is an explorer, yet on the most fundamental level more a meticulous scholastic than a thrill seeker. Researching the various forms of height sickness, he is frightened to discover it can prompt swelling of the cerebrum or to the lungs slowly loading up with liquid.  

Having no religious inclinations himself, he begins to speculate on Tibetan Buddhism as a prerequisite for survival at such an elevation, yet makes the classic Western blunder of putting substantial discipline before mental striving.

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