i did this question in grade 8 too
naicam
In your back garden.
well every night for the last 12 weeks they would of been in a anderson shelter or if they had no garden a morrison shelter in there house!!
depends on its shape. Circular garden would be 56.72 ft, a square garden 64ft
There were two types of shelter available for home use during World War 2. The Anderson shelter was supplied to people who had a back garden. You would have to dig a hole in your garden big enough to bury half of the shelter. The spoil from the hole was then used to cover the top of the shelter. It was reasonably successful in protecting from bomb blast but couldn't take a direct hit. The Morrison shelter was for people who had no back garden and was basically a self assembled steel cage which could be put under a stairs or somewhere similar.
hard steel I would say, corrugated iron, or the one in my next door neighbour's garden when we were growing up was. These were in individual's gardens for their own use, so it would have to be big enough for two people to spend time in.
Well I would say it wouldn't affect it that much if the car was in good shape but if its was in poor shape then it would be devalued by alot
The shape and dimensions of one plot.
If humans continued to destroy their shelters havoc would take over the world. This is because these action affect other people.
it would shape like a penis
I don’t think race would affect it as much as the particular age group and the events the shape the perspective of the individual
An air raid shelter is an underground shelter from bombing. During the last war the sirens would go off to tell people the German bombers were coming and they would all grab their gas masks and the children and rush to the nearest air raid shelter. This might be a home made one in the garden or one made by the council in the local park or an underground railway station or, in the case of Stockport near Manchester, caves dug out of the rock under the town.
a toads food is in the flower garden so they like to make their nest by the garden